Monday, September 23, 2013

Total US Productivity Growth Is Bad For The Stock Market

Productivity growth at a company level is good for individual company stocks, but overall US productivity growth is bad for the overall stock market.

From "Productivity Growth and Stock Returns: Firm- and Aggregate-Level Analyses" by Hyunbae Chun, Jung-Wook Kim, Randall Morck, NBER Working Paper No. 19462, September 2013:
Technological innovation is not a blessing for all firms, or for investors holding the market. In the late 20th century US, individual firms’ stock returns correlate positively with their own productivity growth, yet the market return correlates negatively with aggregate productivity growth, yet. This seeming fallacy of composition reflects Schumpeterian creative destruction: a few technology winners’ stocks rise with their rising productivity while many technology losers’ stocks fall with their declining productivity. Thus, most individual firms’ stock returns correlate negatively with aggregate productivity growth. Analogous reasoning explains prior findings that the market return correlates negatively with aggregate earnings.

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