Instructions Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) is a hypothesis on financial economics that highlight the effects of information to assets price. In the context of capital market, information reflects the share price. The informations refered above are basically events that happen through out the year that become a risk to the company or industry. Your task: 1. Form a group (4 or 5 in a group). Please update the group listing and membership in the group chat. 2. Select an industry (Telecommunication, Construction, Services, Food Industry, Manufacturing Industry etc). Each group should select a different industry from each other. No 2 groups can be doing the same industry. Please update your selection of industry in the group chat we apply the first come first serve basis. 3. Select maximum 5 companies in the selected industry that has an equity capital (shares trading actively). Please inform the lecturer the list of the companies listed before you start preparing the report for approval. 4. Observed the share price for the past 5 years up to 31st May 2020. 5. Identify the ups and downs and find out from the mass media events that reflect the change in share price. 6. Identify the events either they are systematic or unsystematic risks and justify your answer. 7. Write a report not more than 20 pages (Font TNR 12, 1.5 spacing, aligned). The report need to be submitted latest by 31 January 2022, after Turnitin checking of not more than 30% Similarity Index (the rutnitin link will be provided in the group chat). 8. Prepare not more than 15 minutes video of your findings. The video need to be submitted latest by 31 January 2022. 9. All submission has to be made in the MST platform. Suggested TOC for the assignment 1. Introduction: What the purpose of this report 2. Review on the theory. EMH 3. Industry intro your industry, why you choose this industry 3. Companies selected: introduce the companies, why choose the companies 4. Findings: Consistencies of EMH with share price of the companies 5. Conclusion: is EMH theory still stands