Close Menu
Aspire Market Guides
  • Home
  • Alternative Investments
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economics
  • Equity Investments
  • Mutual Funds
  • Real Estate
  • Trading
What's Hot

Continental Sells ContiTech to Lone Star Funds and Will Become a Pure-play Tire Manufacturer

July 4, 2026

Shiba Inu’s Sudden 37% Spike in Exchange Activity Puts Bulls in Charge

July 4, 2026

Mirae Asset TIGER200 Covered Call 5% OTM ETF – Equity – Derivatives announces Monthly dividend, payable on July 02, 2026 – marketscreener.com

July 4, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending:
  • Continental Sells ContiTech to Lone Star Funds and Will Become a Pure-play Tire Manufacturer
  • Shiba Inu’s Sudden 37% Spike in Exchange Activity Puts Bulls in Charge
  • Mirae Asset TIGER200 Covered Call 5% OTM ETF – Equity – Derivatives announces Monthly dividend, payable on July 02, 2026 – marketscreener.com
  • Detention sought over alleged ticket scalping
  • Gold price outlook hinges on macroeconomic conditions as geopolitical risks, Asian demand gain influence
  • Mixed-ecology church: why definitions matter
  • Aggressive hybrid mutual funds – Looking for the best mutual funds to invest in? Check top 10 picks for July 2026 – The Economic Times
  • Lapid: Israel should have bombed Iran’s oil, energy infrastructure during war
  • ‘Truly Bizarre,’ Ripple Veteran Dismisses Old-Time XRP Commentary
  • Singapore Exchange builds on derivatives growth as regional investors seek risk management
Saturday, July 4
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Aspire Market Guides
  • Home
  • Alternative Investments
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economics
  • Equity Investments
  • Mutual Funds
  • Real Estate
  • Trading
Aspire Market Guides
Home»Economics»Soaring stock market doesn’t mean economy has recovered
Economics

Soaring stock market doesn’t mean economy has recovered

By CharlotteApril 26, 20265 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link


Judging by the soaring stock market, investors ostensibly think the economy is doing great. Stock prices briefly took it on the chin when the conflict with Iran broke out nearly two months ago. However, they have since rebounded in anticipation of the hostilities winding down and recently hit record highs.

Of course, the stock market isn’t the economy. Technology companies whose stock prices are driven by excitement over artificial intelligence account for almost half of the market, as measured by the value of outstanding stock. The AI enthusiasm is operating on its own dynamic, independent of the Iran conflict and broader economic developments.

Then there is the massive tax cut that corporate America received this year as part of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The most lucrative aspect of that legislation is that businesses can now expense their investments up front, rather than depreciate them, reducing their tax bills. This has significantly boosted after-tax profits and, in turn, companies’ stock prices.

But the surge in stock prices goes even beyond AI and after-tax profits, and reflects investors’ view that, if push comes to shove, the president will bail them out. That is, Trump uses the stock market as a barometer of how well his policies are doing, and therefore will do whatever is necessary, such as end the Iran conflict, to ensure that if stock prices fall, they won’t stay down for long.

Given all this, I wouldn’t take solace in the record stock market as an indicator of the economy’s performance.

Lagging consumer sentiment

And judging by record-low consumer sentiment, most Americans appear to agree. That’s right: Stock prices are at a record high, while consumer sentiment is at a record low — at least as measured by the venerable University of Michigan survey of consumers, which began in the 1950s. Sentiment is even lower than in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic and the global financial crisis. Taking the survey results at face value, consumers are saying the economy has never been worse.

Most Americans have good reasons to be uncomfortable with their financial situations. Most don’t own stocks, at least none of any consequence, so higher stock prices don’t mean anything to their financial fortunes.

And most are also having a tough time with the high and rising cost of living. The so-called affordability crisis is plaguing many families, as groceries, childcare, healthcare, education, and housing have become much more expensive in recent years. The one thing Americans purchase regularly that hadn’t risen in price was gasoline, but the Iran conflict ended that.

But consumers’ deep-seated angst goes beyond dollars and cents, to the nation’s fractured politics. The University of Michigan survey breaks responses down by political party affiliation. Democrats and independents believe things couldn’t be worse; Republicans aren’t ecstatic, but they are generally OK with how things are going. It was literally just the opposite — Democrats feeling fine and Republicans feeling blue — the day before Trump won reelection.

Given all this, I wouldn’t fret that the economy is struggling nearly as badly as consumers seem to say. After all, while they aren’t spending with any gusto, they are spending. That’s not consistent with a garden-variety recession, let alone the worst economy ever.

Small business holding steady

If stock investors are overly rosy and consumers too blue, does anyone have it right? I’d put my money on small-business owners, who appear to be reasonably level-headed.

That’s the message in a monthly survey of small businesses that their trade group, the National Federation of Independent Business, has been conducting since the 1970s. The NFIB survey is far from the record high, which it briefly touched in the wake of the big tax cuts in Trump’s first term, but also from the record low it hit in 1980, the last time the U.S. and Iran were at serious loggerheads during the hostage crisis.

Small businesses appear nervous, but not panicked. They are worried about how the events in Iran will play out, as sentiment has fallen sharply since the conflict began. But reading between the lines of the survey results, small-business owners also seem in a funk over the extraordinarily uncertain environment in which they are operating.

It’s all but impossible for small businesses to gauge the up-and-down tariffs, the wild swings in immigration policy, and the increasingly combative relationship the U.S. has with the rest of the world — just to name a few things they are trying to get a grip on. It’s not that the heightened uncertainty is enough to cause them to cut investment and fire workers, but it is enough to stop them from expanding their operations and hiring.

The world will undoubtedly remain an uncertain place, but if we could simply dial back the policies that are fanning the uncertainty, the economy would be off and running again. Stock investors, consumers, and small-business owners would all feel much better, and they would be right.



Source link

Related Posts

Economics

Gold price outlook hinges on macroeconomic conditions as geopolitical risks, Asian demand gain influence

July 4, 2026
Economics

Mixed-ecology church: why definitions matter

July 4, 2026
Economics

China COVID response to determine world economy’s future

July 4, 2026
Economics

Doing Development Economics at a Liberal Arts College Part One

July 4, 2026
Economics

The Myth of Scandinavian Socialism

July 4, 2026
Economics

Donald Trump: ‘The Trump economy is soaring’: US President cites stock market rally and tax cuts ahead of Independence Day

July 4, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Continental Sells ContiTech to Lone Star Funds and Will Become a Pure-play Tire Manufacturer

July 4, 2026

Shiba Inu’s Sudden 37% Spike in Exchange Activity Puts Bulls in Charge

July 4, 2026

Mirae Asset TIGER200 Covered Call 5% OTM ETF – Equity – Derivatives announces Monthly dividend, payable on July 02, 2026 – marketscreener.com

July 4, 2026

Detention sought over alleged ticket scalping

July 4, 2026
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first. Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.


I consent to being contacted via telephone and/or email and I consent to my data being stored in accordance with European GDPR regulations and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.

Featured

The Economic Law That Explains Why Leaders Can’t Stop Adding

May 28, 2026

US equities soar, but President Trump’s ‘Operation Project Freedom’ sparks new Hormuz drama

May 4, 2026

Bitcoin Price Falls Below $77,000 Amid Macroeconomic Risks

April 28, 2026
Monthly Featured

Disinflation continues across all sub-groups, says Central Bank chief

April 14, 2026

Market Wrap: Bitcoin Stalls As SpaceX IPO Takes Centre Stage

June 12, 2026

Egypt’s North Coast captures one-third of national real estate sales

June 7, 2026
Latest Posts

Continental Sells ContiTech to Lone Star Funds and Will Become a Pure-play Tire Manufacturer

July 4, 2026

Shiba Inu’s Sudden 37% Spike in Exchange Activity Puts Bulls in Charge

July 4, 2026

Mirae Asset TIGER200 Covered Call 5% OTM ETF – Equity – Derivatives announces Monthly dividend, payable on July 02, 2026 – marketscreener.com

July 4, 2026
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first. Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.


I consent to being contacted via telephone and/or email and I consent to my data being stored in accordance with European GDPR regulations and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.

© 2026 Aspire Market Guides.
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first.

Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.


I consent to being contacted via telephone and/or email and I consent to my data being stored in accordance with European GDPR regulations and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.