The influence of macroeconomic indicators on the nepalese stock market
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Abstract
This study investigates the influence of selected macroeconomic indicators namely
inflation rate, broad money supply (M2), GDP growth rate, on the performance of the
Nepalese stock market, as measured by the NEPSE index, over the period from 1993 to
2024. A descriptive and causal-comparative research design was employed, using
secondary data collected from Nepal Rastra Bank and the Securities Board of Nepal. The
study utilized EViews and Microsoft Excel for statistical analysis. The correlation
analysis revealed a significant positive relationship between money supply and
remittance inflows with the NEPSE index, while inflation and GDP growth exhibited
weak and statistically insignificant correlations.
The study reveals a significant positive correlation between broad money supply (LNM2)
and the NEPSE index, indicating that higher liquidity supports stock market growth in
Nepal. Inflation (LNINF) shows a significant negative correlation with NEPSE, while
GDP growth (LNGDPG) has no significant relationship, suggesting a weaker or indirect
impact. Regression and ARDL analyses further confirm that money supply is the most
influential macroeconomic factor, positively affecting the NEPSE index in both the short
run and long run. The lagged NEPSE index also has a significant effect, reflecting
investor momentum. In contrast, inflation and GDP growth show negative or
insignificant impacts. The models demonstrate strong explanatory power, emphasizing
the critical role of liquidity in driving Nepal’s stock market performance.
Keywords: Nepal Stock Exchange (NEPSE), Correlation, Macroeconomic Indicators,
Money Supply, Inflation, GDP Growth, OLS Regression, ARDL Model, Capital Market
