Firepower for U.S. stocks may lose spark
as Democrats gain clout
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[November 07, 2018]
By Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. stock market
may be facing the remainder of Donald Trump's presidential term with the
prospect of less juice to supercharge it.
Stock returns have been fueled the past year by Trump's corporate tax
cuts, which have pumped up profits. Yet, any hope of further fiscal
stimulus in the form of more tax cuts faded with the results of
Tuesday's congressional elections, with Democrats taking control of the
House of Representatives from Trump's Republican party.
"The return to political gridlock in Washington will likely serve to
temper growth expectations, or at least moderate the prospect of
additional stimulative fiscal policy," said Jon Hill, US Rates
Strategist at BMO Capital Markets in New York.
The election comes as the market is also losing the low-rate monetary
policy that has supported equities during its near decade-long bull run,
as the Federal Reserve is raising interest rates to stave off inflation.
Without both fiscal and monetary stimulus, Wall Street performance will
depend even more on fundamental factors at a time investors are looking
for signs pointing to when the long economic expansion will finally end.
“This is really not a stock market that needs more fiscal stimulus and I
think in order for the bull market to continue what it really needs is
strong earnings in the face of what is likely to be increasing interest
rates,” said Rick Meckler, partner at Cherry Lane Investments, in New
Vernon, New Jersey.
Indeed, some investors may see a silver lining in the diminished
prospects for more tax cuts, given concerns about the ballooning deficit
and even higher interest rates.
“If the Republicans swept today, you would get more fiscal stimulus but
that also would likely result in higher interest rates and the Fed
moving potentially faster," said Keith Lerner, chief market strategist
at SunTrust Advisory Services in Atlanta. "So beyond the initial
positive reaction, my sense is that there would be some offsets from
higher interest rates.”
At the same time, the potential for some fiscal stimulus is still alive
through an infrastructure spending package, an area where analysts say
Trump and Democrats could find common ground and where an agreement
could boost stocks, particularly shares in construction and materials
companies.
HEADWINDS AHEAD
Tuesday's result of a split Congress, with Republicans keeping control
of the Senate, was the most likely scenario projected by polling data
and prediction markets ahead of the elections, and had been anticipated
by investors.
Immediate market moves to the news may be misleading. Two years ago,
stocks futures plunged when it became clear that Trump would win the
presidency, only for them to reverse course within hours.
Stock market gains this year may indeed continue - stocks historically
have climbed following midterm elections. For the two calendar years
following each national U.S. election, the S&P 500 had a mean annual
increase of 12 percent under Republican-controlled governments, compared
to an increase of 9 percent for Democratic-controlled governments and a
7 percent rise for gridlocked governments.
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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York, U.S., October 11, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File
Photo
Yet replicating the lofty returns of Trump's first half of his term
- the stock market is up 29 percent since his election - may prove
elusive.
Democratic control of the House makes the prospect of a new tax-cut
package, following the recent steep cut in the U.S. corporate tax
rate, appear less likely. Trump has been seeking a 10 percent
middle-class tax cut while making permanent individual tax cuts from
his 2017 tax overhaul.
The change in House control could bring other challenges for the
market.
Trump's favoring of light regulations for banks and other industries
has created a climate that investors say has helped stocks. A
Democratic-led House could bring greater oversight on industries
such as pharmaceuticals and banks.
With fresh oversight power, Democrats could inspect nearly every
aspect of Trump's presidency from his long-elusive tax returns to
possible business ties with Russia and conflicts of interest. In the
event the House attempts to impeach Trump, history suggests market
volatility could spike, at least in the short term, according to
OppenheimerFunds.
But, on the positive side for stocks, analysts doubt Democrats would
be able to roll back the heart of the market-friendly changes,
including the corporate tax cuts.
The Democrats' victory in the House could also benefit the market,
some investors have said, by tempering Trump's aims such as on
international trade.
Any pressure on stocks could be less severe because the stock market
already endured a steep pullback in October from record highs, which
some investors in part attribute to jitters over uncertainty about
the election.
And some investors will be happy just to move on from the elections.
"It’s one less thing that’s in front of you that you have to worry
about," said Walter Todd, chief investment officer at Greenwood
Capital in Greenwood, South Carolina.
(Additional reporting by Jennifer Ablan, Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and
Trevor Hunnicutt in New York; Editing by Megan Davies and Frances
Kerry)
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