The Best and Worst Presidents (According to the Stock Market)

Which U.S. presidents oversaw the best and worst stock market performances? Just for grins, let's see what a 'stock market Mount Rushmore' might look like.

a closeup of mt rushmore in south dakota
(Image credit: Getty Images)

Mount Rushmore features massive 60-foot-tall busts of celebrated presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln, each chosen for their respective roles in preserving or expanding the Republic.

But if you were to make a Mount Rushmore for presidents based on stock market performance, none of these men would make the cut. There really was no stock market to speak of during the Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln administrations, and Teddy Roosevelt ranks as one of the worst-performing presidents of the past 130 years – at least as far as Wall Street is concerned.

The next contender in this category will be picked just days from now with the November 5 presidential election quickly approaching (you can find key updates in Kiplinger's live election blog). And while elections themselves have little longstanding impact on the stock market, the policies of the commander-in-chief in office can certainly influence portfolio returns.

Just for grins, let's consider what a "stock market Mount Rushmore" might look like. While we're at it, we'll rank every president that we can realistically include based on the available data – and that data includes a few caveats below.

How we calculated presidential stock market returns

The following is a ranking of every president since Benjamin Harrison (who, sneak preview, did not do very well) by stock market performance, in order from worst to best. 

The data is as of August 31, 2024. Returns data are price only (not including dividends), which tends to favor more recent presidents. Over the past half-century, dividends have become a smaller portion of total returns due to their unfavorable tax treatment. 

Data is not adjusted for inflation. This will tend to reward presidents of inflationary times (Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford, etc.) and punish presidents of disinflationary or deflationary times (Franklin Delano Roosevelt, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, etc.). Presidents from Hoover to the present are ranked using the S&P 500-stock index, whereas earlier presidents were ranked using the Dow Jones Industrial Average due to data availability.

Charles Lewis Sizemore, CFA
Contributing Writer, Kiplinger.com

Charles Lewis Sizemore, CFA is the Chief Investment Officer of Sizemore Capital Management LLC, a registered investment advisor based in Dallas, Texas, where he specializes in dividend-focused portfolios and in building alternative allocations with minimal correlation to the stock market.