An empirical evaluation of the psychological barriers hypothesis of security pricing
thesis
posted on 2017-11-09, 03:18authored byPaul Anthony Lalor
Models of security pricing under the Efficient Market
Hypothesis embody two major assumptions: first, that there exists some
economic principle by which a security's future returns distribution can
be discounted in competitive markets to give a measure of that
security's fundamental value, and second, that investment behaviour
underlying competitive trading in securities is based on rational,
wealth maximising expectations. All models of market efficiency
predict that security prices in such markets are forced by competitive,
rational forces to equate to their fundamental values, and that no
information remains unused by such rational forces by which future
returns different from market expectations can be systematically and
accurately predicted. However, there have emerged in the economic
literature alternative models of security pricing which depart from the
major Efficient Market assumption of rational expecations. These
investor-sentiment models have different implications for the pricing of
securities, allowing for both systematic variation in prices away from
fundamental values and predictability of future returns on securities
based on information concerning past returns and price levels. One such
investor-sentiment model recently developed is the barriers hypothesis
(RG. Donaldson and H.Y Kim, Journal of Financial and Quantitative
Analysis, 28(3): 313-330, 1993). Like other models of this genre, it
invokes investor psychology and behaviour inconsistent with rational
expectations and hence with market efficiency. Using daily prices for
the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) from 1952 to 1990, Donaldson
and Kim provide highly significant evidence supporting the validity of
their barriers hypothesis. That is, inconsistent with predictions of all
Efficient Market models, psychological price barriers have been a
significant property of the DJIA over approximately the past forty
years. In recognizing the potential importance of these findings for
our understanding the processes of security pricing, the literature
review of this thesis closely examines and compares the general
structure of Efficient Market models with that of alternative
investor-sentiment models. The empirical so strongly supported. The
findings of this thesis show major flaws in the methodology employed by
Donaldson and Kim. Replication of their study revealed that all
barriers tests were marred by one or more of the following problems:
presence of high degrees of autocorrelation in regressions; lack of
robustness of results over different subperiods; poor test construction
resulting in low testing power; and generation of results, not reported
by the authors, that were strongly inconsistent with the barriers
hypothesis. In fact, most if not all major empirical results reported by
Donaldson and Kim in support of the barriers hypothesis are shown to be
artefacts arising due to poor methodology or data issues. The
conclusion of this thesis, in direct contrast to that of Donaldson and
Kim, is that there exists no evidence in favour of the barriers
hypothesis as a model explaining daily movements in the DJIA over the
past forty or so years. Furthermore, no evidence in support of the
barriers hypothesis was found in tests using the Australian All
Ordinaries Price Index. The null hypothesis of no barriers, which in
fact can be taken as a model under the Efficient Market Hypothesis, is
unambiguously accepted by the empirical tests presented in this thesis.