Random walks and market efficiency in Chinese and Indian equity markets
Oleg Malafeyev, Achal Awasthi, Kaustubh S. Kambekar

TL;DR
This study examines the impact of major financial crises on the efficiency of Chinese and Indian stock markets, finding they do not follow random walks and are generally inefficient, with some improvement after 2008.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of market efficiency in China and India across different crisis periods using multiple statistical tests.
Findings
Both markets do not exhibit weak form efficiency.
Market efficiency increased slightly after the 2008 financial crisis.
Recession periods had limited impact on market efficiency.
Abstract
Hypothesis of Market Efficiency is an important concept for the investors across the globe holding diversified portfolios. With the world economy getting more integrated day by day, more people are investing in global emerging markets. This means that it is pertinent to understand the efficiency of these markets. This paper tests for market efficiency by studying the impact of global financial crisis of 2008 and the recent Chinese crisis of 2015 on stock market efficiency in emerging stock markets of China and India. The data for last 20 years was collected from both Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE200) and the Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite Index and divided into four sub-periods, i.e. before financial crisis period (period-I), during recession (period-II), after recession and before Chinese Crisis (periodIII) and from the start of Chinese crisis till date (period- IV). Daily returns for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFinancial Markets and Investment Strategies · Monetary Policy and Economic Impact · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis
