"Americans’ Faith in Markets Up, but Only Slightly
Americans’ overall faith in the stock market increased slightly in the first quarter, according to a survey by a pair of economists at the University of Chicago and Northwestern University. But the stock market’s appeal following government intervention remains split along party lines.
The Financial Trust Index, developed by Paola Sapienza of Northwestern’s Kellogg School and Luigi Zingales of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, launched in December to track U.S. trust in the financial system. The latest reading, which measures attitudes toward private institutions in which Americans can invest their money (banks, the stock market, mutual funds, and large corporations), was based on a survey of of 1,013 people in the final two weeks of March.
Trust toward the stock market increased to 13% in March from 11% in December, reflecting a willingness to invest, higher expectations for returns, the survey found. Fewer people (47% in March vs. 56% in December) think it’s “very likely or somewhat likely” that the stock market will drop more than 30% in the next 12 months. (Yes, that’s still a surprisingly high number of people expecting a sharp drop in stocks.)
Government intervention in the financial system makes 67% of Americans less confident in investing in markets, down from 80% in December. But the improvement was concentrated among Democrats and independents: About 25% of people identifying as Democrats said they felt more confident investing in the stock market after government interventions, compared to 12% in December. About 12% of independents said they felt the same way, up from 9% three months ago.
Republicans remain wary about the government involvement: 76% of Republicans are less confident in investing in stocks following the interventions, though down from 82% in December.
Trust toward banks and large corporations continued to decline as layoffs mount and public anger over bonuses grows."
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