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Eugene Fama




  Birth Place Boston , Massachusetts
  Death Date
  Death Place
  Occupation American Economist


Eugene Fama (born February 14 1939 ) is an American economist, known for his work on Portfolio Theory and Asset Pricing , both theoretical and empirical.

He earned his undergraduate degree in French from Tufts University in 1960 and his MBA and Ph.D. from the Graduate School Of Business at the University Of Chicago in Economics and Finance . He has spent all of his teaching career at the University of Chicago.

His Ph.D. thesis, which concluded that and ''Institutional Investor'' in 1968 .

His article ''The Adjustment of Stock Prices to New Information'' in the International Economic Review, 1969 (with several co-authors) was the first Event Study that sought to analyze how stock prices respond to an event, using price data from the newly available CRSP database. This was the first of literally hundreds of such published studies.

Fama is most often thought of as the father of ," has ever since vexed researchers.

In recent years, Fama has become controversial again, for a series of papers, co-written with Kenneth French , that cast doubt on the validity of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), which posits that a stock's "beta" alone should explain its average return. These papers describe two factors above and beyond a stock's market beta which can explain differences in stock returns: market capitalization and "value". They also offer evidence that a variety of patterns in average returns, often labeled as "anomalies" in past work, can be explained with their 3 factor model.

Additionally, Fama co-authored the textbook ''The Theory of Finance'' with Nobel Memorial Prize In Economics winner Merton H. Miller . He is also the director of research of Dimensional Fund Advisors , Inc., an investment advising firm with $126 billion under management ( As Of 2006 ). One of his children, Eugene F. Fama Jr., is a vice president of the company.


FAMA AND FRENCH THREE FACTOR MODEL

In the portfolio management field, Fama and French developed the highly successful three factor model to describe the market behavior.

CAPM uses a single factor, beta, to compare a portfolio with the market as a whole. But it oversimplifies the complex market. Fama and French started with the observation that two classes of stocks have tended to do better than the market as a whole: (i) small caps and (ii) stocks with a high book-value-to-price ratio (customarily called value stocks; to be differentiated from Growth Stocks ). They then added two factors to CAPM to reflect a portfolio's exposure to these two classes:
r-R_{f}=\beta_{3}(K_{m}-R_{f})+bs\cdot SMB+bv\cdot HML+\alpha

Here r is the portfolio's return rate, R_{f} is the risk-free return rate, and K_{m} is the return of the whole stock market. The "three factor" \beta is analogous to the classical \beta but not equal to it, since there are now two additional factors to do some of the work. SMB and HML stand for "small minus big" and "high [book/price minus low"; they measure the historic excess returns of small caps and "value" stocks over the market as a whole. By the way SMB and HML are defined, the corresponding coefficients bs and bv take values on a scale of roughly 0 to 1: bs = 1 would be a small cap portfolio, bs = 0 would be large cap, bv = 1 would be a portfolio with a high book/price ratio, etc. The Fama-French Three Factor model explains over 90% of stock returns. The signs of the coefficients suggested that small cap and value portfolios have higher expected returns--and arguably higher expected risk--than those of large cap and growth portfolios.1

The three factor model is gaining recognition in portfolio management. Morningstar.com classifies stocks and mutual funds based on these factors. Many studies show that the majority of actively managed mutual funds underperform broad indexes based on three factors if classified properly. This leads to more and more index funds and ETFs being offered based on the three factor model.


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