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Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH)

The Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) is a financial theory stating that asset prices, particularly stocks, reflect all available information, making it impossible to consistently achieve higher returns than the overall market. Developed by Eugene Fama in the 1970s, it implies that stocks always trade at their fair value, meaning “beating the market” through expert analysis is impossible. 

Key Components and Forms of EMH

The theory suggests that because information is immediately incorporated into prices, only new information (unpredictable news) can change prices, leading to a “random walk”. 

  • Weak Form: Suggests that all past trading information (prices and volume) is reflected in current prices, meaning technical analysis cannot produce superior returns.
  • Semi-Strong Form: Argues that all public information (earnings, news) is already incorporated, meaning fundamental analysis cannot produce superior returns.
  • Strong Form: Asserts that all information, public and private (insider info), is reflected in prices, meaning no one can beat the market. 

If the EMH is true, investors should favor passive investing strategies, such as buying low-cost index funds, rather than trying to pick individual stocks or hiring active managers. The theory implies that active management is ineffective, as the cost of research and trading outweighs any gains. 

Critics argue that market anomalies, such as long-term market overreactions or periods of irrationality driven by behavioral biases (fear and greed), prove that markets are not perfectly efficient. Behavioral finance suggests that investor psychology causes prices to deviate from their true value.

NPR

3 quick things as inflation jumps to its highest since 2023 : NPR

The U.S. war with Iran has pushed inflation to its highest level in almost three years.

Consumer prices in April were up 3.8% from a year ago, according to a report Tuesday from the Labor Department. That was the biggest annual increase since May 2023.

Prices rose 0.6% between March and April.

Expensive Coffee

Did you know a $5 dollar cup of coffee ☕ can actually cost $150?

Coffee

If you are age 30, and buy a cup off coffee for $5 instead of buying an index fund that has a 9.8 percent return, the average of the S&P 500 over the past 90 years, and let it mature for 35 years, you would end up with about $150, which of course doesn’t include inflation or fees.

The point is every consumer item you buy, is essentially stealing from your future.

We all have to live, spend some money, get enjoyment out of today. But certainly something in a styrofoam or paper cup, that’s going to end up in a landfill or a fire shortly after use should be avoided, especially if you can make due without or find a less expensive option for enjoying today. I drink coffee, but I make it in my percolator pot, using my reusable mug.