http://economics.about.com/cs/stockmarket/a/stock_recession.htm

Do Changes in Stock Prices Cause Recessions?

>From Mike Moffatt,
Your Guide to Economics.
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Do Changes in Stock Prices Cause Recessions?

The economy and the stock market are closely related. Many people
examine the stock market to find out how the economy is doing. It's long
been known that if the stock market is in a period of decline, the
economy is sure to follow. However there is little evidence that the
stock market causes the economy to rise or fall. The stock market does
not directly affect the economy. It is simply a mirror of people's
generally correct beliefs about what is about to happen in the economy.
The best way to understand this is to realize that a stock market index
the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) is simply a price. Because the
value of index is a price, it only has two determinants: supply and
demand.

Supply
Any first year college textbook in Economics states that for most goods
if the supply increases in the short run then the price of the good
should decline.

Do Changes in Stock Prices Cause Recessions? page 2
Demand
It appears that if we want to understand why the economy tends to move
in the same direction as the stock market, we'll have to consider the
demand for stocks. To do this, we'll need to understand what motivates
an investors decision to buy or sell shares. Many investors such as
Warren Buffett evaluate their stock portfolios on their inherent value.
The inherent value is the total expected earnings of the company over a
time period, discounted by the fact that a dollar today is not worth as
much as a dollar tomorrow. If investors believe that a recession is
coming, then they will believe that company earnings will be less in the
future (since that typically takes place in a recession) which will
decrease the inherent value of the stock. When the inherent value of the
stock is far below its current price, investors will sell the stock,
driving the price of the stock down.

If investors believe a boom is coming, they will increase their
estimates of the inherent value because future earnings should be higher
than they previously expected. Often this will lead to the inherent
value being far higher than the current price of the stock, so investors
buy the stock. This leads the price of the stock to rise.
The belief that the stock market drives the economy is due to an error
in logic. Generally we think that if A came before B that A caused B.
Philosophers refer to this as the post hoc, propter hoc fallacy. In this
case, the expectation of a decline in the economy causes the stock
market to decline today. Or in logical terms, A came before B, because
the expectation of B caused A. It's also important to realize that it's
not the expectation of future economic changes that is causing changes
in stock prices. It's the fact that people are acting on these
expectations. If investors bought and sold stocks based on astrological
factors or Barry Bonds' current homerun total then these would be
causing the price of stocks to change. In a situation like that, it
would seem that the stars are causing the price of stocks to change; the
economy would have nothing to do with it.

It is because a large number of investors act on this inherent value
principle that the economy tends to follow the stock market. Investors
are constantly watching macroeconomic variables to try and determine
when the next downturn in the economy will happen. Investors are often
right when they predict the future growth rate of the economy. As a
result, they often sell off their shares before the economy goes into a
decline making it look like the stock market is causing a recession. In
reality the causality runs the other way because the two things that
causes price to change are changes in supply or changes in demand.








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