Trump Tantrum looms on Wall Street if
healthcare effort stalls
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[March 23, 2017]
By Megan Davies and Rodrigo Campos
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Trump Trade could
start looking more like a Trump Tantrum if the new U.S. administration's
healthcare bill stalls in Congress, prompting worries on Wall Street
about tax cuts and other measures aimed at promoting economic growth.
Investors are dialing back hopes that U.S. President Donald Trump will
swiftly enact his agenda, with a Thursday vote on a healthcare bill a
litmus test which could give stock investors another reason to sell.
"If the vote doesn’t pass, or is postponed, it will cast a lot of doubt
on the Trump trades," said the influential bond investor Jeffrey
Gundlach, chief executive at DoubleLine Capital.
U.S. stocks rallied after the November presidential election, with the
S&P 500 posting a string of record highs up to earlier this month, on
bets that the pro-growth Trump agenda would be quickly pushed by a
Republican Party with majorities in both chambers of Congress.
The S&P 500 ended slightly higher on Wednesday, the day before a floor
vote on Trump's healthcare proposal scheduled in the House of
Representatives.
On Tuesday, stocks had the biggest one-day drop since before Trump won
the election, on concerns about opposition to the bill.
Investors extrapolated that a stalling bill could mean uphill battles
for other Trump proposals. Trump and Republican congressional leaders
appeared to be losing the battle to get enough support to pass it.
Any hint of further trouble for Trump's agenda, especially his proposed
tax cut, could precipitate a stock market correction, said Byron Wien,
veteran investor and vice chairman of Blackstone Advisory Partners.
“The fact that they are having trouble with (healthcare repeal) casts a
shadow over the tax cut and the tax cut was supposed to be the principal
fiscal stimulus for the improvement in real GDP," Wien said. "Without
that improvement in GDP, earnings aren’t going to be there and the
market is vulnerable."
Strategists have been cautioning for weeks that markets are pricing in a
scenario where nothing goes wrong with Trump's agenda. Investors are
paying $18.10 for every dollar in earnings expected on the S&P 500 over
the next 12 months, near the most expensive U.S. stocks have been since
2004.
"This is really about the fact that the market is pricing in too much
certainty on a number of accounts," said Julian Emanuel, executive
director of U.S. equity and derivatives strategy at UBS Securities.
"Even if you got the positive vote, there's still the residual knowledge
that the agenda will be difficult to get through the Senate."
While investors and strategists have said they do not see an immediate
threat to the eight-year-old bull market, there is a risk of a 5-to-10
percent drop. Only a bear market -a 20 percent decline- would put an end
to the bull.
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A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) as
news plays on a television in the background shortly after the
opening bell in New York, U.S., March 22, 2017. REUTERS/Lucas
Jackson
"It looked like a mini tantrum," said David Kotok, chief investment
officer of Cumberland Advisors. "Trump has made the House vote his
own now so he has a lot at stake. My guess it will pass the House.
If not, markets will be shocked and it won't be pleasant."
Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at the US SPDR Business
at State Street Global Advisors in New York said that it the
healthcare bill fails, "a correction of 5 percent is not
unreasonable given how far we’ve come in such a short period of
time."
FOCUS ON LEGISLATION
Investors are now more focused on the actual mechanics of the
legislative process, said Brian Daingerfield, Macro Strategist at
NatWest Markets.
"I noticed this was the first day (on Tuesday) I was getting
inquiries about the healthcare law and the vote count," Daingerfield
said. Wall Street views the healthcare vote "as a test of Trump's
ability to unify the party," he said. "It has a symbolic
significance."
After the healthcare bill, the market will look for movement on tax
and infrastructure. The president has said he wants the health bill
passed by the mid-April Easter holiday and a schedule from the
administration aims for tax reform being passed by August. Only then
will they begin to tackle infrastructure spending.
"U.S. equities have been priced for perfection since the start of
2017 and (Tuesday) was a rude reminder that the legislative process
is imperfect on even its best days," said in a research note
Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at Convergex, a global
brokerage company based in New York.
(Additional reporting by Jennifer Ablan, Chuck Mikolajczak, Caroline
Valetkevitch, Sinead Carew, Richard Leong, Lewis Krauskopf, Saqib
Ahmed; Editing by David Gregorio)
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