What happens on 'the other side' of election uncertainty
History shows that the stock market usually performed well regardless of the U.S. president’s political party.
This suggests that there isn’t a political party that’s necessarily bad for the stock market. Maybe some presidents are better for the market than others, especially at the industry level. But there isn’t clear evidence showing that a particular president alone can have enough of a material, long-term impact that the fundamentals driving the market higher will turn unfavorably.
“Over time, the stock market’s strongest threads have been the economy and earnings, not who’s in the Oval Office,” Ritholtz Wealth Management’s Callie Cox said.
At the margin, however, the results of a presidential election can certainly cause market volatility to rise in the short-term. After all, each candidate comes with very different ideas for policies like the corporate tax rate. Over time, companies will adapt and adjust to new policies as they work to preserve earnings growth. But they need some clarity as to what those new policies could be before proceeding with changes.
As such, companies will often take a wait-and-see approach ahead of an uncertain election. That’s a headwind for economic activity in the short-term. And with polling data showing the presidential candidates neck and neck ahead of this year’s election, companies are once again saying that they’ll wait for election results to move forward with any changed business strategies.
“It was unsurprising that the U.S. election came up quite a bit in last week’s earnings calls,” RBC’s Lori Calvasina said on Monday. “As has been the case in recent quarters, there were numerous references to the uncertainty that the event has created and the adverse impact that uncertainty has had on business activity. Several companies noted the need to simply get to the other side.”
Uncertainty doesn’t only keep business executives on the sidelines. It keeps traders and investors on the sidelines too.
History shows that during election years, the stock market tends to deliver below-average returns ahead of Election Day. However, the rally tends to pick up once we “get to the other side” and the uncertainty wanes.
“[R]egardless of the election outcome, declining uncertainty typically lifts equity valuations and prices following Election Day by more than the typical seasonality would suggest,” Goldman Sachs’ Ben Snider wrote in a February note to clients.
The fact that the S&P 500 fell 1% in October is very much consistent with history.
Leave a Reply