Semi-Strong Form Efficiency

Semi-Strong Form Efficiency

Semi-strong form efficiency is an aspect of the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) that assumes that current stock prices adjust rapidly to the release of all new public information. It contends that non-market and inside information as well as market information are factored into security prices and that nobody has monopolistic access to relevant information. The weak form of EMH assumes that the current stock prices reflect all available security market information. Semi-strong form efficiency contends that security prices have factored in publicly-available market and that price changes to new equilibrium levels are reflections of that information. Because share prices instantly reflect all available information, then tomorrow’s prices are independent of today’s prices and will only reflect tomorrow’s news.

The semi-strong efficiency EMH form hypothesis contends that a security's price movements are a reflection of publicly-available material information.

What is Semi-Strong Form Efficiency?

Semi-strong form efficiency is an aspect of the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) that assumes that current stock prices adjust rapidly to the release of all new public information.

The semi-strong efficiency EMH form hypothesis contends that a security's price movements are a reflection of publicly-available material information.
It suggests that fundamental and technical analysis are useless in predicting a stock's future price movement. Only material non-public Iinformation (MNPI) is considered useful for trading.

Basics of Semi-Strong Form Efficiency

Semi-strong form efficiency contends that security prices have factored in publicly-available market and that price changes to new equilibrium levels are reflections of that information. It is considered the most practical of all EMH hypotheses but is unable to explain the context for material nonpublic information (MNPI). It concludes that neither fundamental nor technical analysis can be used to achieve superior gains and suggests that only MNPI would benefit investors seeking to earn above average returns on investments.

EMH states that at any given time and in a liquid market, security prices fully reflect all available information. This theory evolved from a 1960s PhD dissertation by U. S. economist Eugene Fama. The EMH exists in three forms: weak, semi-strong and strong, and it evaluates the influence of MNPI on market prices. EMH contends that since markets are efficient and current prices reflect all information, attempts to outperform the market are subject to chance not skill. The logic behind this is the Random Walk Theory, where all price changes reflect a random departure from previous prices. Because share prices instantly reflect all available information, then tomorrow’s prices are independent of today’s prices and will only reflect tomorrow’s news. Assuming news and price changes are unpredictable then novice and expert investor, holding a diversified portfolio, would obtain comparable returns regardless of their expertise.

Efficient Market Hypothesis Explained

The weak form of EMH assumes that the current stock prices reflect all available security market information. It contends that past price and volume data have no relationship to the direction or level of security prices. It concludes that excess returns cannot be achieved using technical analysis.

The strong form of EMH also assumes that current stock prices reflect all public and private information. It contends that non-market and inside information as well as market information are factored into security prices and that nobody has monopolistic access to relevant information. It assumes a perfect market and concludes that excess returns are impossible to achieve consistently.

EMH is influential throughout financial research, but can fall short in application. For example, the 2008 Financial Crisis called into question many theoretical market approaches for their lack of practical perspective. If all EMH assumptions had held, then the housing bubble and subsequent crash would not have occurred. EMH fails to explain market anomalies, including speculative bubbles and excess volatility. As the housing bubble peaked, funds continued to pour into subprime mortgages. Contrary to rational expectations, investors acted irrationally in favor of potential arbitrage opportunities. An efficient market would have adjusted asset prices to rational levels.

Example of Semi-Strong Efficient Market Hypothesis

Suppose stock ABC is trading at $10, one day before it is scheduled to report earnings. A news report is published the evening before its earnings call that claims ABC's business has suffered in the last quarter due to adverse government regulation. When trading opens the next day, ABC's stock falls to $8, reflecting movement due to available public information. But the stock jumps to $11 after the call because the company reported positive results on the back of an effective cost-cutting strategy. The MNPI, in this case, is news of the cost-cutting strategy which, if available to investors, would have allowed them to profit handsomely.

Related terms:

Current Price

The current price is the most recent selling price of a stock, currency, commodity, or precious metal that is traded on an exchange. read more

Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH)

The Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) is an investment theory stating that share prices reflect all information and consistent alpha generation is impossible. read more

Financial Crisis

A financial crisis is a situation where the value of assets drop rapidly and is often triggered by a panic or a run on banks. read more

Fundamental Analysis

Fundamental analysis is a method of measuring a stock's intrinsic value. Analysts who follow this method seek out companies priced below their real worth. read more

Inefficient Market

An inefficient market, according to economic theory, is one where prices do not reflect all information available. read more

Informationally Efficient Market

An informationally efficient market is one that uses all available information in the formation of market prices.  read more

Price Efficiency

Price efficiency is the belief that asset prices reflect the possession of all available information by all market participants. read more

Random Walk Theory and Example

Random walk theory suggests that changes in stock prices have the same distribution and are independent of each other. read more

Strong Form Efficiency

Strong form efficiency is a type of market efficiency that states that all market information, public or private, is accounted for in a stock price. read more

Technical Analysis

Technical analysis is a trading discipline that seeks to identify trading opportunities by analyzing statistical data gathered from trading activity. read more