Indian Stock Market

Indian Stock Market
Author: Gourishankar S. Hiremath
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 135
Release: 2013-10-28
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 8132215907

India is one of the major emerging economies of the world and has witnessed tremendous economic growth over the last decades. The reforms in the financial sector were introduced to infuse energy and vibrancy into the process of economic growth. The Indian stock market now has the largest number of listed companies in the world. The phenomenal growth of the Indian equity market and its growing importance in the economy is indicated by the extent of market capitalization and the increasing integration of the Indian economy with the global economy. Various schools of thought explain the behaviour of stock returns. The Efficient Market Theory is the most important theory of the School of Neoclassical Finance based on rational expectation and no-trade argument. The book investigates the growth and efficiency of the Indian stock market in the theoretical framework of the Efficiency Market Hypothesis (EMH). The main objective of the present study is to examine the returns behaviour in the Indian equity market in the changed market environment. A detailed and rigorous analysis, made with the help of the sophisticated time series econometric models, is one of the key elements of this volume. The analysis empirically tests the random walk hypothesis and focuses on issues like nonlinear dynamics, structural breaks and long memory. It uses new and disaggregated data on recent reforms and changes in the market microstructure. The data on various indices including sectoral indices help in measuring the relative efficiency of the market and understanding how liquidity and market capitalization affect the efficiency of the market.

Market Efficiency in India

Market Efficiency in India
Author: Satish kumar
Publisher:
Total Pages: 12
Release: 2018
Genre:
ISBN:

As long as financial markets are concerned, for many years' economists, statisticians and financial analyst have been interested in developing and testing models of stock price behaviour and their forecast. This study examines whether the Indian stock market is efficient if the stock returns follow a random walk. The study employs daily closing prices of NSE Midcap 50 Index for a time period of 15 Sept 2010 - 28 Nov 2014. The existence of random walk for NSE Midcap Index has been examined through autocorrelation, Q-statistics and the run test and finds that the Indian stock market was not efficient in the weak form during the testing period. The results suggest that the stock prices in India do not reflect all the information in the past stock prices and abnormal returns can be achieved by investors through exploiting the market inefficiency.

Market Efficiency in India

Market Efficiency in India
Author: Dr. Satish Kumar
Publisher:
Total Pages: 11
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

As long as financial markets are concerned, for many years' economists, statisticians and financial analyst have been interested in developing and testing models of stock price behaviour and their forecast. This study examines whether the Indian stock market is efficient if the stock returns follow a random walk. The study employs daily closing prices of NSE Midcap 50 Index for a time period of 15 Sept 2010-28 Nov 2014. The existence of random walk for NSE Midcap Index has been examined through autocorrelation, Q-statistics and the run test and finds that the Indian stock market was not efficient in the weak form during the testing period. The results suggest that the stock prices in India do not reflect all the information in the past stock prices and abnormal returns can be achieved by investors through exploiting the market inefficiency.

An Empirical Study on Seasonal Analysis in the Indian Stock Market

An Empirical Study on Seasonal Analysis in the Indian Stock Market
Author: Dr. P. Nageswari Sathish
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1
Release: 2020
Genre:
ISBN:

The presence of the Seasonal or Monthly Effect in stock returns has been reported in several developed and emerging stock markets. This study investigates the existence of seasonality in India's stock market. The Efficient Market Hypothesis suggests that all securities are priced efficiently to fully reflect all the information intrinsic in the asset. The Seasonal Effects create higher or lower returns depending on the Time Series. They are called Anomalies because they cannot be explained by traditional asset pricing models. Examples of such patterns include e.g. the January Effect, the Day-of-the Week Effect and the Week of the Month Effect etc. Studies on the Seasonal Effects in the Indian Stock Market are limited. In an attempt to fill this gap, this study explores the Indian Stock Market's Efficiency in the 'weak form' in the context of Seasonal Effects. The objective of this paper is to explore the Seasonal Effect on the Indian Stock Market. For the purpose this analysis BSE Sensex index was chosen for a period of ten years from 1st April 2000 to 31st March 2010. The study found that the Day of the Week Effect and Monthly Effect Pattern did not appear to exist in the Indian Stock Market during the study period.

Empirical Evidence on Weak Form Efficiency of Indian Stock Market

Empirical Evidence on Weak Form Efficiency of Indian Stock Market
Author: Asha E. Thomas
Publisher:
Total Pages: 24
Release: 2018
Genre:
ISBN:

Efficient Market Hypothesis is an investment theory which states that it is impossible to 'beat the market' because market efficiency causes exiting share prices to always incorporate and reflect all relevant information. Stocks are always traded at their fair value on stock exchanges and so the scope of residual returns, either by purchasing undervalued stocks or by selling the stocks for inflated prices is impossible. Ever since Fama (1965) propounded his famous Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH), a number of empirical studies have been conducted to test its validity, both in developed markets and as well as in emerging markets. The contradictory nature of the results and the change in the current market scenario encouraged the researcher to conduct a research in the market efficiency of Indian Stock Market. One cannot beat the market by using historical information on prices of securities if the market is said to be Weak Form efficient. Statistical tools like autocorrelation and run test were used to test the Weak Form market efficiency. One-sample Kolmogorov-Smirnov test was used to find out how well a data series fits a particular distribution. The null hypothesis of the study was whether the Indian Stock Market is Weak Form efficient. The results of both non-parametric (Kolmogrov -Smirnov goodness of fit test and run test) and parametric test (Auto-correlation test) provide evidence that the share prices do not follow random walk model and the significant autocorrelation co-efficient at different lags reject the null hypothesis of weak-form efficiency.

Efficiency of India's Capital Market -- An Empirical Analysis

Efficiency of India's Capital Market -- An Empirical Analysis
Author: P. K. Mishra
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

The concept of efficient market hypothesis is gaining importance in the aftermath of integration of India's economy with world economies. With the increasing relevance of FIIs, an informationally efficient capital market holds far reaching implications for its stable growth as well as for the economic growth of the political economy of a country. Thus, the understanding of efficiency of capital market of India in the dynamics of the stock markets is essential. There is sufficient evidence in favour of capital market efficiency in developed markets. But the same is often not valid in emerging markets. This paper studies the efficient market hypothesis in its weak form in the frame work of random walk model for NSE in India from 2001 to 2008. The ADF, DF-GLS, and PP tests are used to examine stock market efficiency. The results support that the stock markets of India do not follow random walk, rejecting the weak form efficient market hypothesis.

An Empirical Analysis of Semi-Month and Turn of the Month Effects in Indian Stock Market

An Empirical Analysis of Semi-Month and Turn of the Month Effects in Indian Stock Market
Author: Dr. P. Nageswari Sathish
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1
Release: 2020
Genre:
ISBN:

The efficiency of the capital market raises various issues all over the world. Earlier research studies give evidence that the capital markets are informational efficient and hence, cannot outperform the market consistently on the basis of price change predictions. However, some researchers have also brought into light seasonal effects/calendar anomalies in the developed markets. This paper investigates one such anomaly (Semi-month and Turn of the month effects) in an emerging Indian Capital Market. The S&P CNX Nifty and BSE Sensex Index data have been collected and analyzed for a period of six years from 1st January 2005 to 31st December 2010. The analysis of the study found that the semi-month and turn of the Month Effect not exists in Indian Stock Market during the study period.

An Empirical Study on Value Investing in Indian Stock Market

An Empirical Study on Value Investing in Indian Stock Market
Author: Aggarwal Priti
Publisher: Independent Author
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2022-12-13
Genre:
ISBN: 9781805451242

Stock market anomalies have always been a hot topic of debate between scholars and investment practitioners. And the fascination is not new. It all started with the Great Depression of the 1930s when the stock markets crashed steeply. Since then, the academician of the world has gotten into a rat race of developing theories to determine the true value of common stocks. These pricing theories became the cheese slice for investors who wanted to chase abnormal returns by utilizing the knowledge of stock mispricing.