Thursday, May 10, 2012
1:45 PM
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Labels:
american
,
comparison
,
correlation
,
emotional health
,
gallup
,
market
,
results
,
stocks
,
survey
Recently Gallup ran an
article on the 4 year emotional health of the american population. The main result from the article was:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgaNnFtXlW5YDTHcSiS-70uwvepmlpDSPqvEjBlcTyT9OENgr5Dt54pd9h_7BufW_UEwNwf42CBpgJywnh4w9h_B5lEN0-11VKW-qatJFt4SWr4aqDw5CPYyvD1ixP_1BxcCYPVFDwWgyjC/s400/emotional_health_4yr.jpg) |
Emotional health index of the american population over 4 years.
I could not help but notice this correlation with the performance of the market marked by the S & P over the past 4 yrs:
|
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwFQ2v9tDzRF_Xm4ZpJ6ibWc-vVSH2f7d7O0sSWNMPLTlozwDO-RXmr2oXgJr25b2HvvtxUFlS2UMjL4Taa6JJvzqfGYWM4hAdHdoWN956i42KwmMxxjxhmi8P9ejo0xoi6jgPXDBgWfgP/s400/s_n_p_4yrs.png) |
Performance of the S&P index over a 5 year period. |
It can be seen by the comparison above that money or financial health does have a correlation with the overall emotional well being of the population.