Stock markets don't fund investment. Why, then, do we worship them? - Richard Murphy

13th April 2026

Just about everything you have been told about stock markets and the UK economy is wrong. Politicians talk nonsense about stock markets. Financial advisors repeat it. The BBC reports FTSE 100 movements as economic news, and economics textbooks embed a set of false thinking in students' heads. But the truth is that while the City of London likes to claim that stock markets are essential to saving, investment and economic growth, that is not true.

In this video, I challenge the claim that buying shares funds real investment in the economy.

To do that, I explain the crucial difference between the primary stock market, where companies issue new shares and raise money, and the secondary stock market, where existing shares are traded.

The reality is simple: the primary market is small, and the secondary market dominates. Most stock market activity is just the exchange of existing wealth between savers, not the creation of new investment.

I also look at the numbers. Trillions of pounds of shares are traded each year on the London Stock Exchange, but only a small fraction raises new capital for companies. Maybe 98% of all share trading is in secondhand shares, and the companies whose shares are traded get no money at all as a result of that. That breaks the assumed link between stock markets and real economic activity, such as jobs, productivity and growth.

The video also explores what stock markets actually do: they provide liquidity for unnecessary share trading, generate potentially quite misleading price signals about the value of companies, and it enables wealth to change hands and accumulate. What they do not reliably ever do is fund productive investment.

I then consider the policy implications. The UK provides large tax subsidies to pension saving in shares, yet the return in terms of real investment appears to be negative: the subsidy exceeds the sum that reaches businesses for productive purposes. That raises serious questions about whether public policy is directing money to the right place for the benefit of the economy at large.

Finally, I explain what really funds business activity, which is bank lending, retained profits and public investment.

If you think stock markets drive growth, this video will challenge that idea, I hope, because that claim is very largely a work of fiction.

00:00 — The myth of the stock market
00:50 — Claims about savings, investment, and growth
01:40 — Why saving can reduce economic activity
02:20 — The false link between shares and investment
03:10 — Two markets explained: primary vs secondary
04:00 — Primary market: IPOs and new capital
04:50 — Secondary market: trading existing shares
05:30 — Why companies get nothing from most trades
06:20 — The scale: trillions traded vs billions raised
07:10 — Over 95% of activity is secondhand trading
08:00 — Why stock markets don't drive real investment
08:40 — Financial engineering vs productive growth
09:20 — What stock markets actually do
10:00 — Liquidity: buying and selling shares
10:40 — Price signals vs real company value
11:20 — Markets driven by sentiment and speculation
12:00 — Shares as claims on future income
12:40 — Wealth accumulation vs wealth creation
13:20 — Why the myth persists
14:00 — Policy, media, and economic misunderstanding
14:40 — Rachel Reeves and government policy
15:10 — Alternatives: bank lending and retained profits
15:50 — Rethinking pensions, investment, and growth
16:20 — Conclusion: moving beyond the stock market myth

TRANSCRIPT
A transcript for this video is available at: https://www.taxresearch.org.uk