Trying
to understand the impact of a bull stock market on the economy can present some
chicken-and-egg dilemmas – where does correlation stop and causation begin? One
belief commonly held by many consumers, investors and some market analysts is
that a rising stock market is indicative of a progressing economy. Even if this
were true, it's difficult to know whether the rising stock market actually
affects economic growth or if it is one of the side effects of a healthy and
productive business environment.
Some
speculate that an improving economy leads to larger consumer spending, more
equity investments and stock values that rise in accordance with an increase in
companies' intrinsic values. This entire argument presupposes that consumer
confidence and aggregate homogeneous spending increases actually drive economic
growth. This still doesn't necessarily show that a rise in stock market prices
leads to appreciable economic improvements.
Taking
this argument at face value leads to some significant empirical problems,
however. The record stock market gains in the late 1990s or the mid-2000s were
subsequently followed by bursting asset bubbles. This probably does not mean
that rising stocks lead to economic decline.
It
is more likely that bear stock markets do not cause recessions, but that they
are instead just side effects of a fundamentally unhealthy economy. In the same
light, bull markets probably have limited abilities to positively impact
underlying economic fundamentals.
Bull
markets can arise from a shift in trading strategies, perhaps by investors
pursuing higher growth assets. Stock prices tend to rise during periods of
inflation when more dollars are pouring into the markets, independent of real
economic growth. An increase in savings could lead to fewer purchases of
consumer goods and more money invested in the stock market, pushing stock
prices higher. It is fairly clear that there are limits to the correlation
between economic health and stock markets.
If,
either through accident or improved investor decisions, a bull market arose and
an unusual amount of the additional investments went to very healthy and
productive companies, then those companies would be able to expand operations,
hire new employees and innovate. In these circumstances, long-term economic
fundamentals would be improved.
The
strongest link between the stock market and the economy is that, in the
aggregate, increases in available credit and the circulation of money boost the
gross domestic product (GDP) and the stock market simultaneously. This still
does not necessarily mean that the economy is healthy, nor does it represent
any causality between stock prices and economic growth.
Economies
grow when productivity and efficiency increase, consumer goods become more
available to larger groups of people and when people can subsist while still
saving money. Saved money increases the capital stock (which the stock market
uses), and future investments towards productive ends are possible.
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