A Theory of Market Efficiency
Anup Rao

TL;DR
This paper introduces a mathematical framework called market connectivity to measure and analyze market efficiency by modeling trade networks and assessing how quickly and reliably information is communicated through market transactions.
Contribution
It develops a new theory and methods for testing market efficiency that avoid the joint-hypothesis problem and enables comparison of different markets' efficiencies.
Findings
Provides metrics to compare market efficiencies.
Offers methods to identify profitable market inefficiencies.
Evaluates the impact of policies on market performance.
Abstract
We introduce a mathematical theory called market connectivity that gives concrete ways to both measure the efficiency of markets and find inefficiencies in large markets. The theory leads to new methods for testing the famous efficient markets hypothesis that do not suffer from the joint-hypothesis problem that has plagued past work. Our theory suggests metrics that can be used to compare the efficiency of one market with another, to find inefficiencies that may be profitable to exploit, and to evaluate the impact of policy and regulations on market efficiency. A market's efficiency is tied to its ability to communicate information relevant to market participants. Market connectivity calculates the speed and reliability with which this communication is carried out via trade in the market. We model the market by a network called the trade network, which can be computed by recording…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Game Theory and Applications
