Home » Most Recent Stories

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EQUITY PRICES AND THE REAL ECONOMY

5 March 2010 by Cullen Roche 2 Comments

By Rohan at Data Diary:

A May 2007 paper by some fellows at the St Louis Fed looked at “Monetary Policy and Stock Market Booms and Busts in the 20th Century“. It’s worth a read if you have the time. The following charts are taken from it:

Expanding money supply may be expressed in the host’s equity market – and/or any other sector(s) of its asset markets.  It could also escape into consumer price inflation. Or it could actually be used for productive investment. The point is that if money supply is expanding faster than the fundamental economy, the excess supply will find a home.

This is a theme we shall explore in more detail at another time. For now wanted to explore a variant of this concept with respect to the equities market – the idea that the equities market can get ahead of the real economy when risk appetite and expanding money supply conspire to juice things up:

This chart isn’t so simple to read given that the absolute range of outcomes – on the face of it we are sitting in the middle of the long term range.  It also doesn’t take into account the substitution of equity for debt (and vice versa) that is one of the objectives of our analysis.  A better interpretation perhaps is that provided by relative market capitalisation.  I’m still on the hunt for raw data but in the meantime consider this chart from The Chart Store (via The Big Picture):

It makes for an interesting comparison…

Cullen Roche

Cullen Roche

Bio - Coming Soon.

More Posts - Website

Follow Me:
TwitterYouTube

Disclosures - Unless otherwise noted, authors have no positions in any securities mentioned and readers should never consider this to be investment advice. Always consult your financial advisor before acting on any ideas. Comments Guideline - Readers who denigrate authors or other readers will be banned without warning. This site does not tolerate any sort of reader abuse. The goal of this site is to create an environment that is conducive to learning and better understanding of the monetary system and the investment world. We expect readers to behave maturely and responsibly. We welcome and encourage intense and intelligent discourse, but the site adheres to a strict 1 strike policy. While it is your right to speak freely, it is not your right to behave childishly. Above all else, please enjoy the site. It is intended to be used as an educational tool and we hope the intelligent and mature debate will further that purpose. We hope readers will make an effort to respect that goal. Comments with excessive linking or foul language will be moderated before posting.
Comments
  • Clueless

    Would not read too much into these charts – GDP represents a crude yardstick for the income from publicly listed companies, since not only does it include the non-listed private sector but also the public sector, their direct expenditure and investments. Much better to stick to a “narrower universe” and measure the market cap in relation to earnings, sales, cash-flow, EV, etc. All this data is readily available and replacing it with GDP just adds too much noise.

    • Grouch

      No, the data you mention is not available for timeperiods long enough to put recent events into context.