Subject: Re: S&P Free Cash Flow growth
When you're considering the entire US economy as a whole, top level macro limits come into play.
...
The S&P 500 is not a proxy for the entire economy...


Well, true, exactly as I mentioned in my post.
" You have to be careful not to assume that (say) the S&P 500 typifies all companies in the US both public and private--the public companies could pull ahead (or fall behind) relative to private companies for a while. Though that's probably not a big factor, since public companies include almost all the big ones."

But in any case
(1) my suggested graph of corporate net margins WAS the entire corporate US, not the S&P 500 subset. ( https://fred.stlouisfed.org/gr... )
(2) the two results are not in any case all that wildly different. That's partly because such a broad set has aggregate economic characteristics not so different from the whole set, and partly because the S&P 500 covers a lot of the US economic corporate economic activity. For example, there are 81 non-bank companies in the S&P 500 with revenues over $40bn, and only 5 private companies of any type that big.


Jim