“Now the stock market is substantially higher than it was before the pandemic,” Trump said in his farewell speech on Wednesday.
He is correct in saying that the shares are currently being traded in record territory and therefore at a higher level than before the pandemic. However, the market’s performance during his tenure was not a record.
Under President Barack Obama, the S&P 500 rose 85% during its first term, having hit rock bottom in March 2009 during the financial crisis. During President Bill Clinton’s first term, the rate rose 79%.
Shares initially rose when Trump was elected, while corporate America focused on its pro-business agenda, which included tax cuts, deregulation and pledges to spend on infrastructure.
The economy was also strong, helping to fuel the market boom.
According to Joe Biden, who took office as president on Wednesday, the stock market is expected to occupy a less prominent place on the White House’s list of priorities.
“The idea that the stock market is growing is his only measure of what is going on,” Biden said of Trump in the final presidential debate in October. “Where I come from in Scranton and Claymont, people don’t live on the stock market.”
On Wednesday, Biden’s first day in office, all three major US stock indices ended the day with historic highs.
Biden never made any promises about how the stock market would perform during his tenure, and that should not change now that he has been sworn in. But one way or another, he started well.
– Matt Egan and Annalyn Kurtz from CNN contributed to this story.