50+ Years of Corporate Profits

If you are obsessed with the Fed’s balance sheet, Congress, Nouriel Roubini, or any of the many other doomsayers, you might want to print out this chart of corporate profits to refer to from time to time. Corporate profits continue to climb.

Since this chart is done on a logarithmic scale, it suggests that corporate profits are rising at a pretty steady constant percentage rate. I’m sure the composition of corporate profits has changed—which companies are producing them—over time, but American business seems to be remarkably resilient.

50yearscorpprofits zps95a830ed 50+ Years of Corporate Profits

Source: St. Louis Fed (click on image to enlarge)

There have been plenty of periods where corporate profits have declined or been stagnant. There have been a few periods where corporate profits grew at sustained high rates. Both have tended to regress toward the mean. If you take out all of the zigs and zags, you can see that corporate profits have continued to grow at a pretty steady underlying rate. There’s lots of year-to-year variability, but it’s a somewhat more hopeful view than a constant “sky is falling” outlook.

Keep in mind that when you buy stock, you are buying a share of the corporate profits too. If corporate profits continue to rise over time, share prices should participate as well.

In the long run, the optimists tend to win.

3 Responses to 50+ Years of Corporate Profits

  1. […] looks at corporate profits. (Systematic Relative Strength, Dr. Ed’s […]

  2. Rob says:

    You may want to look at corporate balance sheets instead of corporate profits:
    http://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?post=226717
    That chart in the link above is the true picture.

  3. gw timeshare services

    50+ Years of Corporate Profits • Systematic Relative Strength • Dorsey Wright Money Management Systematic Relative Strength

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