Driver

Driver

A driver is a factor that has a material effect on the activity of another entity. Macro drivers affect large areas of the market at a time and often include large, widely-sweeping events such as wars, trade agreements or other geopolitical events. Every company will have its own unique drivers, although some of the most common drivers include the release of new products or services, new financing, commodity or resource prices, activities of competitors, legislation, regulation, and product diversification versus competitors. An example of a micro driver would be if a company like Coca-Cola acquired a large up-and-coming beverage maker that was stealing large parts of the total beverage Coca-Cola market share. The best fundamental investors will identify the three or four key drivers for the stocks they own and follow the status of those drivers religiously, knowing that they hold the key to the overall performance of the stock.

A driver, in finance and economics, refers to some key factor that has a large influence on some outcome of interest.

What Is a Driver?

A driver is a factor that has a material effect on the activity of another entity. Drivers affect change in their targets and occur at many levels of the economy and stock market. Macro drivers cause changes at the overall market level. Micro drivers cause change at the company level.

A driver, in finance and economics, refers to some key factor that has a large influence on some outcome of interest.
Macro drivers are influential fiscal, natural, or geopolitical variables or events that broadly affect a regional or national economy, and are used in top-down analysis.
Micro drivers are fundamental factors that affect a company or sector's bottom line, and is used in bottom-up analysis.

Understanding Drivers

Macro drivers affect large areas of the market at a time and often include large, widely-sweeping events such as wars, trade agreements or other geopolitical events.

A micro driver is anything that could materially affect either a company's earnings or the price of its stock. Every company will have its own unique drivers, although some of the most common drivers include the release of new products or services, new financing, commodity or resource prices, activities of competitors, legislation, regulation, and product diversification versus competitors. Micro drivers are most often employed in bottom-up analysis.

Stock-specific drivers often have no pure quantitative units of measurement, but are more qualitative in nature such as investor sentiment. Qualitative drivers are often intangible and inexact, making it more difficult to collect and measure. Still, understanding people and company cultures are central to any holistic analysis. Looking at a company through the eyes of a customer and understanding its competitive advantage assists with understanding drivers of company success.

Macro-Economic Drivers

Macro drivers are a big area of interest for fund companies running top-down strategies, as they're often concerned with what the global investment themes will be over their time horizon. Fundamental investors may be more concerned with micro drivers that affect the earnings and stock prices of the companies they are analyzing. The best fundamental investors will identify the three or four key drivers for the stocks they own and follow the status of those drivers religiously, knowing that they hold the key to the overall performance of the stock.

Examples of Drivers

An example of a macro driver might be a U.N. trade embargo on all of the countries in Africa. This would affect a large portion of the market, as natural resources that come out of Africa wouldn't be able to reach their usual importers. This would potentially have a negative effect on the industrials and materials sectors, as well as emerging markets stocks. 

An example of a micro driver would be if a company like Coca-Cola acquired a large up-and-coming beverage maker that was stealing large parts of the total beverage Coca-Cola market share. This may have a positive effect on Coca-Cola stock and influence the stock price upwards. For a grocer, like Albertson's, wide margins are a large driver of company performance, while relative market share is less significant.

Related terms:

Bottom-Up Investing

Bottom-up investing is an investment approach that focuses on the analysis of individual stocks and de-emphasizes the significance of macroeconomic cycles. read more

Consumer Discretionary

Consumer discretionary is an economic sector comprising non-essential products that individuals may only purchase when they have excess cash. read more

Economics : Overview, Types, & Indicators

Economics is a branch of social science focused on the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services. read more

Emerging Market Economy

An emerging market economy is one in which the country is becoming a developed nation and is determined through many socio-economic factors. read more

Fundamental Analysis

Fundamental analysis is a method of measuring a stock's intrinsic value. Analysts who follow this method seek out companies priced below their real worth. read more

Green Economics

Green economic theories encompass a wide range of ideas, all dealing with the interconnected relationship between people and the environment. read more

Inflation

Inflation is a decrease in the purchasing power of money, reflected in a general increase in the prices of goods and services in an economy. read more

Investor

Any person who commits capital with the expectation of financial returns is an investor. A wide variety of investment vehicles exist including (but not limited to) stocks, bonds, commodities, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds, options, futures, foreign exchange, gold, silver, and real estate. read more

Macro Risk

Macro risk is a type of political risk in which political actions in a host country can adversely affect all foreign operations.  read more

Market Share

Market share shows the size of a company in relation to its market and its competitors by comparing the company’s sales to total industry sales. read more