Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Two-year-old Bull

No, not a bovine.  Robert Reich highlights the birthday of the stock market rally:
What a difference two years makes. On March 9, 2009 the Dow Jones Industrial Average hit the bottom — closing at a 12-year low of 6,547. Today the Dow is soaring well over 12,000.
From its peak in October, 2007 until its trough two years ago, the stock market lost almost $8 trillion in value. That value hasn’t been completely restored but the Street is well on the way.
I guess this highlights the foolishness of my selling several stocks after the rally was a month old.  Oh well, I slept better back then.  Reich goes on to point out that while the market has gone gangbusters, it has left the average person behind:
The Street’s bull market over the last two years has seriously enriched only the wealthiest 5 percent of Americans who hold the lion’s share of stock. While their earned income starts at $210,000, their unearned income – dividends and capital gains — now puts them considerably above that.
Shouldn’t the shopping of the top 5 percent spur lots of new jobs? Not really. While the top 5 percent are spending more, they’re not spending all that much as a proportion of their earnings. The rich sock away a bigger share of their income than everyone else. After all, being rich means you already have most of what you want.
Moody’s Analytics estimates that the shopping of America’s richest 5 percent now accounts for 35.5 percent of all U.S. consumer spending. Just think how much more spending would be going on — and jobs thereby created — if more Americans shared in Wall Street’s gains.
The remaining 95 percent of Americans are still holding back from the malls because they’re worried about their jobs, their falling wages, their higher health-care deductibles, and their dropping home values. And as long as they continue to hold back, this recovery will be painfully slow.
Happy Birthday Wall Street. Party away. Just know that most Americans aren’t joining the celebration.
Wow, the richest 5% of the population accounts for 35.5% of all U.S. consumer spending?  Too bad they're making even a higher percentage of all the income in the country.

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