Matthew C Klein, Columnist

Markets Just Don’t Care About Government Shutdowns

Price changes in the S&P 500 stock index around the dates of past federal government shutdowns suggest that traders don’t care about them.
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Almost all the world's major stock indexes are down today -- the Dow is off by 126 points as I write this -- and the cause seems pretty obvious: The U.S. government is on the verge of shutting down for the first time since Bill Clinton made Newt Gingrich sit in the back of a plane 17 years ago. Indeed, investors have been skittish for a while: U.S. equity values are down about 2.6 percent since Sept. 19, while 5-year inflation expectations have dropped by more than 0.1 percentage points.

Yet if it is the shutdown that has everyone spooked -- and not the far larger threat posed by a failure to lift the debt ceiling -- then things should calm down in a hurry. A quick check of the performance of the S&P 500 stock index during previous shutdowns suggests suggests that equity prices might actually benefit from a brief suspension of federal government activities.