If it were
the economy affecting stock prices, stock prices would quickly move in response to economic developments.
Not exact matches
• The
Economy ≠ The
Stock Market (Irrelevant Investor) see also Strong Jobs Market, Weak
Stock Market (A Wealth of Common Sense) • Here's What Happened To All 53 of Marissa Mayer's Yahoo Acquisitions (Gizmodo) • Brexit and Democracy (Mainly Macro) see also Brexit
pricing precedents: an empirical study (Macro Man) • Hedge fund fee structure consumes 80 % of alpha (FT) • How to Psychologically Prepare Clients for Bear Markets (Advisor Perspectives) • Kansas» experiment in conservative economics still a bust (Chicago Tribune) • Ego is the Enemy: The Legend of Genghis Khan (Farnam Street) • Be Wary Of Claims About How The Orlando Attack Will
Affect The Election (FiveThirtyEight) see also Florida cut $ 100 million from its mental hospitals.
The answer to whether gold has a higher chance of experiencing big devaluation has to do with forces outside anyone's control, if a big new mine of gold is discovered that could
affect prices, but also if the
economy turns around it could lead investors to pull out of gold and back into the
stock markets.
Juicy Excerpt: One reason why I believe that it is
stock prices affecting the
economy rather than the other way around is that
stock mispricings are sticky.
You have a great blog and are clearly very bright and above many of your peers in the finance industry.As you know, when the market goes down, it pretty much takes everything down with it and small caps have been hit even harder.Everyone feels dumb when the
prices of their
stocks decline and feels smart and vindicated when
prices turnaround and shoot up.We are living in challenging times and the macro is likely to
affect future stockmarket performance
affecting 80 % of all
stocks for a long time to come.
Stocks as part ownership of businesses are
affected by the global economy.In the meantime, most
stock prices have been gyrating based more on Mr Market's emotions of how various
economies will emerge than anything else.
On the one hand, the return on investment is much different than with
stocks or bonds and the fluctuation of commodity
prices can be
affected by things like supply and demand, inflation, and the condition of the
economy as a whole.