The Possible Link between Air Pollution and the Stock Market

Learn About a Study that Links Bad Air and Stock Market Performance

RIVERDALE, NJ / ACCESSWIRE / May 13, 2017 / By now, the dangers of air pollution are well documented, especially as it relates to children and the elderly, who have weaker immune systems, and people who suffer from respiratory problems. But a new study has found a link between air pollution and the stock market, which may indicate that bad air quality is not just a health issue, it may also be an economic hazard.


"Traditionally, we know about the health problems that are associated with bad air quality," stated Kevin Wood, Camfil USA Vice President Sales & Marketing. "But now we are starting to see that perhaps there is an economic price to pay that is directly related to air quality, and that may help open the eyes of some government officials throughout the world about paying more attention to air pollution."

The Study

Per an article in the Harvard Business Review titled Air Pollution Brings Down the Stock Market(1), writer Scott Berinato interviewed Anthony Heyes, a University of Ottawa Economics Professor who conducted the study.

Heyes analyzed information from the S&P 500 index and compared it to the daily air-quality reports provided by an EPA sensor in Wall Street, located in New York.

Heyes and his team found a correlation between high levels of air pollution and low stock performance, which lead them to conclude that bad air quality negatively affects the stock market.

According to Heyes:

"Every time air quality decreased by one standard deviation, we saw a 12% reduction in stock returns. Or to put it in other terms, if you ordered 100 trading days in New York from the cleanest-air day to the dirtiest-air day, the S&P 500 performance would be 15% worse on the 75th cleanest day than it was on the 25th cleanest day. We also replicated this analysis using data from the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, and saw the same effect."

Heyes believes that higher rates of pollutants in the air affect people's emotional state, making them more likely to feel depressed.

"[Bad air] negatively affects how you feel and how good you are at thinking," Heyes stated. "Two, bad moods and lower cognitive capabilities tend to reduce your appetite for risk. Low risk tolerance is associated with lower returns."

Related Effects of Air Pollution

Heyes' study that air pollution can affect people's mood doesn't exist in a vacuum, however, because a 2015 University of Utah study found a link between suicides and elevated levels of air pollution.

Per an article in Live Science(2), the study analyzed information on 1,546 suicides in Salt Lake County from 2000 to 2010.