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LIQUIDITY AND THE INFORMATIONAL EFFICIENCY OF AFRICAN STOCK MARKETS
56
Citations
16
References
2008
Year
Empirical FinanceLiquidityThe Informational EfficiencyTime Series EconometricsMarket MicrostructureAsset PricingManagementRandom WalkFinancial EconometricsEconomicsStock PricesFinanceSecurity MarketFinancial EconomicsRandom WalksMartingale Difference SequenceBusinessMutual FundsStock Market PredictionStock MarketMarket TrendHigh-frequency Financial EconometricsEconomics Of Information
Abstract The hypothesis that a stock market price index follows a random walk is tested for 11 African stock markets, Botswana, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Mauritius, Morocco, Nigeria, South Africa, Tunisia and Zimbabwe using joint variance ratio tests with finite‐sample critical values, over the period beginning in January 2000 and ending in September 2006. The iid random walk hypothesis is rejected in all 11 markets. In four stock markets, Egypt, Nigeria, Tunisia and South Africa, weekly returns are a martingale difference sequence. Liquidity is an important factor which contributes to whether a stock market follows a random walk.
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