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by Richard W. Kopcke
March/April 1992
While the prospect for equity values naturally concerns
traders and investors, it also is a concern for public
policy. Because investors’ wealth depends on the
value of corporate equity, the demand for consumption
goods can vary with the price of stocks. The valuation
of corporations’ productive assets on stock exchanges
also influences businesses’ willingness and ability
to undertake new investments. If the falling price of
stocks should retard the pace of capital formation in
the future, it also would retard the potential growth
of output and living standards.
This article examines the relationship between the
earnings of non financial corporations and the value
of their equity. It concludes that the price of stocks
corresponds more closely to the earnings that companies
disclose in their financial reports than it does to
the earnings for nonfinancial corporations reported
in the national income accounts. This analysis also
suggests that the value of equity does not necessarily
reflect corporations’ incentives for undertaking
investments. If the opportunities for profitable growth,
both here and abroad, remain sufficiently attractive,
lower prices of stocks would not foretell a commensurate
drop in corporations’ capital budgets.
Full-text article 
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