Economy
Related: About this forum"Dow 50,000" Sound Nice. Until Justin Wolfers Shows You That U.S. Markets Are Coming 21st Out of 23. - Justin Wolfers
What does Dow 50,000 actually tell youanything about the economy, or just that a number got bigger?
Dow 50,000 is a milestone, not a measurement. The level of the Dow is basically arbitrary: its a committee-picked set of 30 blue-chip companies, and its not the economy. So if someone wants to turn the stock market into a political report card, the only honest question is: compared to what?
Using the standard apples-to-apples benchmark for international comparisons (the MSCI Total Return Index, which includes dividends), U.S. stocks are up about 16% since the start of Trumps second presidency. The rest of the world is up nearly 38%. Put differently: if there were a Rest of World Dow starting at the same level, the celebration wouldnt be Dow 50,000it would be Dow 60,000.
And that gap isnt abstract. On a $43,488 investment, the difference between 16% and 38% is roughly $10,000. Thats the kind of missing money that matters for real retirement accounts, college savings, and long-run wealth.
The stakes are bigger than one headline. Markets price the futureand they tend to dislike uncertainty, disruption, and instability in rules and institutions. If the U.S. is serving up more uncertainty than peer countries, investors may simply be willing to pay less for assets tied to Americas future. - 02/14/2026.
Topics covered:
Why the Dows level (50,000) is a milestone, not a real economic measure
How the Dow is constructedand what it leaves out
Why the stock market is not the same as the economy
How to compare markets properly with the MSCI Total Return Index
Why total return (including dividends) changes the story
How the U.S. (16%) stacks up against the world ex-U.S. (38%)
The Rest of World Dow thought experiment (50k vs 60k)
What the performance gap means for a typical investor in dollars
Why comparing to peer economies (G7) is a fairer benchmark
Where the U.S. ranks among developed markets (21st out of 23)
Why markets tend to hate uncertainty and disruption
The broader habit: always ask Compared to what?
Contents:
00:00 Dow 50,000and the economists annoying question
01:10 What the Dow actually is (and isnt)
03:05 The right comparison: U.S. vs rest of world (MSCI total return)
05:05 Turning percentages into the missing Dow 60,000 headline
06:15 Making it personal: where the missing $10k comes from
07:20 Comparing the U.S. to G7 peersand the 21st-of-23 ranking
08:20 Why markets may be docking the U.S.: uncertainty and institutions
09:20 The rule for every headline number: Compared to what?
🎯 Key takeaway: Big numbers arent evidencecontext is the evidence.
TheFarseer
(9,763 posts)Is it mostly AI? Is it just stock buybacks and the extremely wealthy having so much money, they cant possibly do anything with it but dump it in the market? Is there just less and less stock available because of mergers and the scarcity necessitates that prices go up? Does anyone have any insight?
sanatanadharma
(4,085 posts)Inflation is general considered bad; rising prices and inflation are said to be problematic
Why then is inflation of stock prices not problematic?
A DOW of 50,000 is a clear sign of inflation unless the entire economy of everyone is booming, and it is not.
The stock market today is a Ponzi scheme where true value is disconnected from the inflated costs of buying stocks.
Trueblue Texan
(4,277 posts)Stock market is doing so well because AI is like a Ponzi scheme right now.
