Accounting
Most Americans Confident In Stock Markets
Investors display healthy levels of confidence in public company auditors (81 percent), independent audit committees (77 percent), audited financial statements (75 percent), and financial advisors (75 percent).
Sep. 29, 2016
Seventy-nine percent of American investors are confident in U.S. capital markets, and 81 percent have confidence investing in U.S. publicly traded companies, according to a survey released today by the Center for Audit Quality (CAQ), the 10th Annual Main Street Investor Survey: A Decade of Investor Confidence. The survey also found that 57 percent of investors think the next U.S. president will significantly impact their investment decisions.
“With 10 years of data, the Main Street Investor Survey provides a sweeping view of the strength and resilience of U.S. investors and the robust confidence they place in our capital markets system,” said CAQ Executive Director Cindy Fornelli.
Investors display healthy levels of confidence in public company auditors (81 percent), independent audit committees (77 percent), audited financial statements (75 percent), and financial advisors (75 percent).
“The CAQ is pleased to observe the robust confidence that investors place in public company auditors and audited financial information,” Fornelli said. “The public company auditing profession is committed to continuous improvement through innovation, finding new and better ways to serve investors and to build trust in capital markets.”
Respondents named growing national debt, global political unrest, cybersecurity threats to personal information and the capital markets, and a possible terrorist attack on the United States as the greatest risks to the U.S. economy. Forty-two percent of investors have confidence in capital markets outside the United States.