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by clarky07 4688 days ago
Anyone ascribing to efficient market hypothesis doesn't watch the market very much. Was Apple really worth several hundred billion more last year than it is now? Either it was extremely overvalued then, or it was extremely undervalued at < 400. Or both. There is nothing efficient about the market. It is volatile and driven very much by emotion on a day to day basis.

Regarding Buffett, he doesn't take over everything. He buys and sells a lot of stock where he doesn't take control, and he does very well doing that as well. Also, he's being doing it for a long long time. This isn't simply flipping 20 heads in a row when you've been doing it for 60+ years

1 comments

Anyone ascribing to efficient market hypothesis doesn't watch the market very much.

Considering that the efficient market hypothesis came out of academics studying the market, and has been tested in many ways, your hypothesis is somewhat suspect.

Was Apple really worth several hundred billion more last year than it is now? Either it was extremely overvalued then, or it was extremely undervalued at < 400. Or both. There is nothing efficient about the market. It is volatile and driven very much by emotion on a day to day basis.

It appears that you do not actually understand the hypothesis that you reject out of hand. The hypothesis is not that the market knows the true value of the company, it does not. It is that the best available information on what the price of the company should be is already integrated into the current company price.

As information shifts just slightly about likely long-term prospects, the best estimate of its price can move a lot. This is not news. Nor is the fact that unavailable future information will change the price. Nor is volatility.

Now if you disbelieve the efficient market hypothesis, then fine. However any inefficiency that you discover, once it becomes known, will naturally stop working. I've seen this happen with several that I knew about. Over time the efficient market hypothesis tends to work better and better.

>It is that the best available information on what the price of the company should be is already integrated into the current company price.

My point is that there hasn't been any news in the last year big enough to warrant a several hundred billion dollar swing. There simply hasn't been. Just changing emotions.

There hasn't?

The theory under which Apple justifies an insane valuation is the one where they continue a constant stream of innovation, defining new products, keeping everyone else guessing.

The simple fact that in the last year Apple has not delivered evidence that they can continue to do that should justifiably weaken belief in that theory. Which means that our best estimate of its future returns is far worse than this optimistic scenario. Which means that we should give less weight to that possibility, and therefore our best estimate of Apple's correct price is less than it was.

Because of this where you see evidence that the market is not pricing efficiently, I see evidence that you are not as smart as the market about finding what price signals to pay attention to.

>The theory under which Apple justifies an insane valuation...

Let's stop there. They have a PE of 7 ex cash. At the top, they had a PE of about 15. Amazon has an insane valuation. Apple does not, and they didn't at the peak. It was merely higher than it is now.

Let's not stop there.

Apple now has declining marketshare in existing business lines, and there is some evidence that they don't know how to generate new profitable product lines. A year ago neither was true, but there were worries about what the lack of Steve Jobs would mean. So their valuation a year ago was high. Their valuation now fits with a company that the market expects to decline.

Amazon by contrast has strong marketshare, increasing numbers of lines of profitable business, and the market understands that they are not generating profit because they keep starting up new potential lines of business that lose money in the short run. They could become very profitable tomorrow if they wanted.

I am not saying that the market's theory about either company is correct. Just that these are theories that are widely held, which justify the stock prices that you claim are simply wrong.