Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
977983 | Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications | 2008 | 5 Pages |
We discuss the deep connection between nonstationary increments, martingales, and the efficient market hypothesis for stochastic processes x(t)x(t) with arbitrary diffusion coefficients D(x,t)D(x,t). We explain why a test for a martingale is generally a test for uncorrelated increments. We explain why martingales look Markovian at the level of both simple averages and 2-point correlations. But while a Markovian market has no memory to exploit and cannot be beaten systematically, a martingale admits memory that might be exploitable in higher order correlations. We also use the analysis of this paper to correct a misstatement of the ‘fair game’ condition in terms of serial correlations in Fama’s paper on the EMH. We emphasize that the use of the log increment as a variable in data analysis generates spurious fat tails and spurious Hurst exponents.