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Financial analysts generally assume that markets
are ``efficient'': that prices reflect
all the information known to market participants and that
consequently the market sets accurate prices for the assets it
trades. Market crashes, large shifts in the relative
valuations
of industry groups, and other fluctuations without apparent
causes are difficult to explain in these terms. Perhaps
markets are efficient only when near an equilibrium point and
cannot be relied upon for accurate feedback in the presence of
rapid or discontinuous change.
Editor: John Walker