What underpins your disbelief? Here is a good paper by Burton Malkiel on the subject and his response to various criticisms of the EMH.
https://www.princeton.edu/ceps/workingpapers/91malkiel.pdf
https://www.princeton.edu/ceps/workingpapers/91malkiel.pdf
quote:If you don't believe in efficient markets, what framework do you believe in? Do you disagree that prices reflect the aggregate expectations of investors? Do you believe markets are efficient over the long-term, but that there is a slow dissemination of information which allows for those investors willing to act quickly to gain an edge? Again, if you don't believe in the EMH framework at all, what alternative framework do you base your investment philosophy on?
As long as stock markets exist, the collective judgment of investors will sometimes make mistakes. Undoubtedly, some market participants are demonstrably less then rational. As a result, pricing irregularities and predictable patterns in stock returns can appear over time and even persist for short periods. Moreover, the market cannot be perfectly efficient or there would be no incentive for professionals to uncover the information that gets so quickly reflected in market prices, a point stressed by Grossman and Stiglitz (1980). Undoubtedly, with the passage of time and with the increasing sophistication of our databases and empirical techniques, we will document further apparent departures from efficiency and further patterns in the development of stock returns.
But I suspect that the end result will not be an abandonment of the belief of many in the profession that the stock market is remarkably efficient in its utilization of information. Periods such as 1999 where "bubbles" seem to have existed, at least in certain sectors of the market, are fortunately the exception rather than the rule. Moreover, whatever patterns or irrationalities in the pricing of individual stocks that have been discovered in a search of historical experience are unlikely to persist and will not provide investors with a method to obtain extraordinary returns. If any $100 bills are lying around the stock exchanges of the world, they will not be there for long.