I recently read the following book by George Soros:
George Soros wonders why his theory of reflexivity has not gained enough traction in both academic and practitioner circles. One explanation is that the theory is difficult to model, according to Soros. That, actually, is not true. Refelxivity theory could quite easily be modelled. You just assume that Trump's or market participants' actions are a shock which influences prices. This shock changes the price in one moment, than the price itself exudes a shock on market participants or Federal Reserve Chairman's beliefs, they adapt, change their beliefs and again exude a shock on the market. The markets are in constant flux or change. George Soros never mentions Bayesian statistics, so I am not sure whether he is familiar with these methods. Bayesian statistics models the current state of events as the prior, which the new information changes, so the prior changes and the posterior results change. Then the prior changes again and so on... The problem with all this is that with democracies and free markets you never quite know what effect Trump or Jay Powell's actions will have on the market. You do not know the shock outcome. But yes, reflexivity theory is not very difficult to put into models.
The Efficient-market hypothesis. Ah, that great academic construct. To put it straight, there are at least 30-40 portfolio managers whose track record in managing investments disprove the Efficient-market hypothesis. As far as I am concerned, a portfolio manager needs to beat the market in at least 5 from 10 years to make the Efficient-market hypothesis invalid. There have been MANY occasions on which portfolio managers have disproved Efficient-market hypothesis. Warren Buffet, George Soros, Bill Miller, Benjamin Graham, Seth Klarman, Joel Greenblatt, Philip Fisher are just some of the most famous examples. Let's take a deep dive. Why is the Efficient-market hypothesis not true. First, it is very difficult to test the truthfulness of the Efficient-market hypothesis. Second, the Efficient-market hypothesis assumes that the aggregate market participants' views are always correct and there is no way to extract 'abnormal' profits. Basically, the Efficient-market hypothesis assumes there is GOD who knows all- God is the aggregate market participants' views, which are ALWAYS right. Why is this NOT true? Anyone who has invested in the markets knows why. There are simply too many frictions. Market participants DO NOT have the same information. What is more, in the Efficient-market hypothesis there are the implicit classical assumptions of classical economics that people are always rational and Supply and Demand are given or exogenous. Basically, that is NOT true. The iPhone supply created its OWN demand. Supply constantly influences Demand and Demand constantly influences Supply. Kahneman and Tversky, Arielly and Richard Thaler have pretty clearly documented that human beings are not always rational, especially in the short term.
To put it in a one single sentence:
YES. IT IS POSSIBLE TO EXTRACT ABNORMAL PROFITS FROM FINANCIAL MARKETS. CONSISTENTLY. PERIOD(.)
Where does that leave classical economics? I am a classical economist in the sense that markets always know better than a single person or dictator. I am a free marketeer. I believe there should be minimal government intervention. I believe there should be both state and private hospitals and universities, where people could choose according to the financial means they have. However, I am Keynesian in the sense the regulators should get involved from time to time to correct the markets' excesses. Why? Because unbridled greed could cause severe damages to the capitalist system in the short run. Yes, as George Soros says, hunans are always fallible, their knowledge is imperfect, but society is after all a human construct.
P.S. Hats off and deep bow to the Chicago School of Economcs and Eugene Fama who developed the
Efficient-market hypothesis and the Columbia Business School which since Benjamin Graham has contended that markets can be predicted and abnormal profits can be extracted from financial markets. I have always dreamt of studying in such universities!
Conflicts of interest: I may possess some of the securities,currencies or their derivatives mentioned in the blogpost and posts on social networks(Twitter, LinkedIn etc.)!
Kind regards,
Petar Posledovich
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