"Feb 19 2009, 2:35 pm
The market mover fallacy
Added to the list of political fallacies I've started...well.. I am starting, right now: the market mover fallacy. Check out this rant by CNBC's Rick Santelli, who is outraged at President Obama's mortgage subsidization plan. That's perfectly reasonable. But the context surrounding his discontent, at least as posted by Matt Drudge, seems to be the news that the equity markets hated the plan. (Check out the reaction of his live audience). Therefore, the plan must be bad.
The underpinning attempt at logic is both formal and cultural; as the markets are supposed to reflect current knowledge and anylysis from a wide range of actors, then the market acts as an appropriate sifting mechanism for policy. For the past 15 years, the government and business and, indeed, all of us, assumed that the market was working properly and that the collective wisdom of private bankers and brokers could be substituted for the wisdom of the public sector and policy makers.
But I think it is always a fallacy to use, as evidence, the up and down movements of the stock market to price out a policy decision, as the number associated with a particular market at close is the sum of so many individual decisions that incorporate, or, indeed, rely on, probabilities and the intuition of mammals.
Television news anchors have used the following formulation in their newscasts: "On news that the XXXX, the Dow dropped XX points today in heavy trading." Or -- "Wall Street is reacting to...." That's OK and less offensive to logic, although their words usually come from the brain of an analyst who is assessing millions of decisions with one broad brush.
The general idea is: our experience should tell us that what's good for Wall Street isn't necessarily what's good for the economy; often it is, but in important ways, it's not; the political culture should not fetishize the market's response."
Me:"But I think it is always a fallacy to use, as evidence, the up and down movements of the stock market to price out a policy decision, as the number associated with a particular market at close is the sum of so many individual decisions that incorporate, or, indeed, rely on, probabilities and the intuition of mammals."
I don't see this fallacy. If the stock market makes a large movement downward on the day that Lehman is not bailed out, then I do take it as evidence that investors were expecting that Lehman would be bailed out. It is, in fact, one way of finding out how investors felt about the non-bailout. Of course, it's not conclusive evidence, but I do see it as evidence. The reason it's evidence is that such a large movement across a breadth of stocks suggests investors were reacting to the same thing.As well, it doesn't prove the decision was a mistake. That will depend upon how you interpret it.
If you see many people leaving a movie theater all at one time, it's evidence that a movie just ended. It's not conclusive evidence, but it's evidence.
If a commentator says a stock is garbage, and the stock goes down, we look to see if he owns it or has any position related to it, on the theory that he might be able to influence the market in his direction for his own benefit. There are even laws against such things. Under your theory, they're senseless.We can't tell why stocks move up or down.
There's no substitute for analyzing data, or assessing evidence in a particular instance.