http://www.cepr.net/stock_market_bubble.htm 

 




The Costs of the Stock Market Bubble


 By Dean Baker

 

Executive Summary


Most economists who have examined the run-up in stock prices over the last four years 
have concluded that it is experiencing a bubble which cannot be sustained. The ratio 
of stock prices to corporate earnings peaked earlier this year at more than thirty to 
one. This ratio is more than twice the historic average, which has been approximately 
14.5 to 1 over the last fifty years. The record high price -to-earnings ratio appears 
even less justifiable given that most mid-term projections show very weak profit 
growth. For example, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that profits will 
actually be 10 percent lower in real terms in 2010 than at present. 

If this CBO projection is anywhere close to being accurate, then it implies that the 
stock market is hugely over-valued. Using a variety of assumptions on future profit 
growth and long-term equity premiums for stocks relative to government bonds, this 
paper shows the extent of the over-valuation to be in the range of $8-13 trillion. An 
over-valuation in the stock market of this magnitude is going to have very serious 
consequences for the rest of the economy. This paper examines some of the likely 
effects of this over-valuation.

The most obvious effect of the stock market bubble has been the decline in national 
savings due to the wealth effect. It is generally accepted that every dollar of wealth 
in the stock market generates 3-4 cents of additional consumption. According to 
standard economic theory, this additional consumption crowds out investment and net 
exports in exactly the same way as a government budget deficit would. A simple 
extrapolation implies that the consumption induced by the bubble has crowded out 
between $460 -$960 billion of both investment and net exports over the last six years. 
At present, the additional consumption attributable to the bubble is having the same 
negative effect on national savings as a $320 billion budget deficit.

According to standard economic theory, this loss of savings has reduced the amount of 
investment in the United States. More importantly, it has been a major cause of our 
trade deficit, which in turn has led to large U.S. borrowings from the rest of world. 
At present, the United States is borrowing close to $450 billion annually from abroad. 
This is money that otherwise could have gone to support investment in the developing 
world. This implies that people in developing nations are paying a high price because 
of the stock bubble in the United States.

A second potentially large cost associated with the bubble is the effect of 
misperceptions of the value of the real wage. There are two ways in which the bubble 
can cause misperceptions. Many higher paid workers, particularly in the high tech 
sector, are receiving a substantial portion of their compensation in the form of stock 
options. In a rapidly rising stock market these options have a high value. If workers 
include the anticipated value of stock options in their wage expectations, then they 
will be expecting a much higher real wage than firms will be able to provide when the 
market corrects. Estimates from a recent Federal Reserve Board study imply that the 
stock market run-up may have added 2.0 percentage points to labor compensation over 
the period from 1994 to 1998.

The second way in which the bubble can lead to a misperception of the real wage is 
through its impact on the value of the dollar. The huge trade deficit implies that the 
dollar is over-valued by between 20-30 percent. This has the effect of raising the 
real wage as long as the high dollar holds down the price of imports. However, when 
the dollar eventually corrects, this effect will be seen in reverse, as the falling 
dollar will lead to higher import prices and a lower real wage. The decline in the 
dollar could lower the value of the real wage by between 1.5and 2.2 percent.

The potential impact of these two effects is quite large. The standard theory of the 
Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU) was based on the view that 
workers came to misperceive the true real wage in a time of rising inflation. 
According to this theory, if they came to expect a real wage that was too high, it was 
necessary to have an unemployment rate that was above the NAIRU for a period of time 
in order to force down expectations. The standard rule of thumb is that to lower 
expectations by 0.5 percentage points, it was necessary to have an unemployment rate 
that is 1.0 percentage point above the NAIRU for a year. Combining the impact of stock 
options and the over-valued dollar, real wage expectations may be more than 3.0 
percent higher than what can be sustained after the adjustment in the dollar and the 
stock market. According to the standard NAIRU theory, this would imply a need to have 
an unemployment rate that is 1 percentage point above the NAIRU for six years (or six 
percentage points higher for one year), in order to get wage expectations back in line 
with the economy's potential. While there are very good reasons for questioning the 
basic tenets of the NAIRU view, economists who accept this theory should be very 
concerned about these implications of an over-valued in the stock market.

Another cost of the bubble is the amount of mis-investment that may have been caused, 
since not all shares were equally over-valued. If many of the Internet stocks were 
significantly over-valued, as now appears to have been the case, it means that tens, 
or possible hundreds, of billions of dollars that could have been invested 
productively were instead wasted in poorly conceived ventures. This mis-investment 
probably came at the expense of many firms in more traditional industries who have 
found it difficult to raise capital in recent years. This effect was exacerbated by 
the run-up in the dollar which made it more difficult for many of these firms to 
compete with foreign firms. It will only be possible to estimate the quantity of this 
mis-allocated investment after the market has corrected, but it is likely that it has 
been large.

The bubble also has led to a substantial redistribution of wealth and income, both 
within and between generations. Within generations, those who were directly employed 
in the bubble industries were best situated to gain. However, many others ended up 
being losers as a direct result of the former group's gains. The most visible 
manifestation of this effect is the soaring housing prices in places like Silicon 
Valley and Seattle, where many of the high-tech firms are headquartered. Those without 
big stakes in these firms had to cope with the run-up in housing prices driven by 
those who had substantial stock holdings.

The generational effect is likely to be quite large. A generation of workers is being 
allowed to sell their stock at inflated prices to younger workers, who will receive an 
extraordinarily bad return on their investments. Reasonable assumptions about the size 
of this effect show that for middle income workers, the losses from buying stock at 
inflated values are likely to dwarf any costs incurred from higher Social Security 
taxes at any point in the foreseeable future. For example, a worker who began placing 
$1000 a year in the market beginning in 1995 would lose between $4,000 and $17,000 by 
2010 as a result of the bubble. The worst scenario for this worker is a gradual 
adjustment by 2010 to the market's proper value. A quick crash would significantly 
reduce these losses. In spite of the size of the prospective loses facing younger 
workers, the stock market bubble has received virtually no attention from the 
economists and political figures who have expressed concern about the potential 
generational burdens created by Social Security or Medicare.

The bubble is also likely to have a large effect on the labor force participation 
rates of older workers who are able to sell their stocks at inflated prices. Many 
economists have raised concerns that Social Security benefits encourage workers to 
leave the labor force earlier than they might have otherwise. For many workers, the 
over-valuation of the stock market will provide much more financial support for an 
early retirement than Social Security.

A stock market correction could have many other effects which are difficult to 
predict. For example, it may cause investors to be excessively cautious about 
investing in the stock market, thereby raising the cost of capital. This was an 
important outcome of the 1929 crash. It may also cause some investors to seek out even 
more high-risk ventures as they look elsewhere to get the double digit returns that 
were available in the stock market between 1995 and 1999. It is also likely that a 
stock market correction will lead to a sea of litigation as investors try to recover 
some of their losses from corporations that provided misleading information or brokers 
who gave bad advice. The effects could be exacerbated if the Federal Reserve follows 
the wrong policy in the wake of a correction, for example if it raised interest rates 
to support the value of the dollar.

The full implications of a stock market correction will be impossible to determine in 
advance. But when prices get as far out of line as they did in the recent stock market 
run-up, it is inevitable that there will be serious consequences. The economics 
profession has been extraordinarily negligent in not paying more attention to this 
problem.

 
 

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