Column: How the market learned to stop worrying and love the blue wave -
Mike Dolan
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[October 14, 2020] By
Mike Dolan
LONDON (Reuters) - Just about the only
market consensus all year on next month's U.S. election was that it
would be volatile around the vote - but even that's turning upside down
three weeks before polling.
A narrow and disputed election result has been one of the main investor
fears for months. Bank of America's October global fund manager survey
still had 60% of its respondents expecting the result to be contested -
and three quarters said it was the outcome likely to cause most market
disruption.
But with Democratic challenger Joe Biden's consistent opinion poll lead
since May widening into election day, bookmakers' odds on a clearcut
outcome and Democrat clean sweep of the White House and both Houses of
Congress are narrowing.
Investment banks and asset managers, who have for decades argued markets
would baulk at tax and spend policies and prefer congressional gridlock
to curb any excesses, are now positively embracing the likelihood of a
clean sweep for a Democratic Party expected to spend big and also raise
wealth and corporate taxes.
With less than a month to go, Wall Street stocks are racing to record
highs again and long-elevated implied volatilities of the S&P500
benchmark - the VIX 'fear gauge' and its November and December futures
contracts - are draining to 6-week lows.
Opinion polls now put Biden's lead over incumbent Donald Trump in double
digits, almost twice September levels. Bookmakers in Europe put Trump as
the 7/4 outsider, his longest odds of the campaign, and the Democrats
are now favorite to take to take key swing states - Arizona, Florida,
Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Online market PredictIt puts the chance of a Biden White House as high
as 66% and a Democrat clean sweep at 59%.
Far from running scared, the investment world appears to be embracing
all that.
A "blue wave election outcome has curiously flipped from consensus bear
to bull catalyst in recent months," Bank of America's investment flow
strategists said on Friday.
"The more likely a sweep, the less likely we see a prolonged election
outcome," Morgan Stanley's cross-asset strategist Andrew Sheets added.
JPMorgan strategist John Normand explains further: "The notion that the
U.S. will soon deliver another round of sizable fiscal stimulus due to a
Blue Wave is likely allowing investors to look through the current
fiscal cliff, White House antics and even a contested election."
"In simplest terms, a Democratic sweep reboots a U.S./global expansion
that began around May, has been losing momentum since August and is at
risk of a serious stumble," he added. "Whatever one thinks about the
course of regulatory policy, the margin impact of higher corporate taxes
and the possibility of stealth deglobalization, what will matter more
for the next 12 months will be front-loaded stimulus."
SWEEP STAKES
So, barring a big upset from here, implied volatility may have been
overcooked despite the twin uncertainties of the pandemic and an
election - never mind persistent background angst about Brexit or
yearend financial and economic stress.
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A street sign, Wall Street, is seen outside New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) in New York City, New York, U.S., January 3, 2019.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
Even taking account of an assumed exaggeration of the VIX due to its use as a
hedging tool, a VIX <.VIX> near 30 at the end of September implied 1-2% daily
market swings over the next month. In other words, a lot of jitters were already
priced.
The drop to as low as 24 over the past week - its lowest since August - looks
more measured.
Although retaining a hefty premium at 28, the November <VXX0> and December
<VXZ0> VIX futures contracts are also at their lowest since late August as
Democrat odds shorten.
Currency market volatility gauges <.DBCVIX> too have fallen to their lowest
since July. Only bond market vol - pricing the effects of a steepening yield
curve after a big fiscal splurge - has tended in the other direction. <.MOVE>
Some commentators point to the expected passing of Trump's erratic
decision-making style and 'policy via Tweet' as another reason for lower
volatility ahead.
After spiking to record highs as the pandemic unfolded, the World Economic
Policy Uncertainty Index - largely based on media references to policy concerns
- has subsided too and September's reading was back below August 2019 levels.
Yet, it's hard to disentangle the effects of this year's pandemic shock and
massive rescues from the election itself.
Despite Trump's relative unpredictability, there's little evidence his tenure
before COVID-19 was any more volatile for equities than the previous four years.
Just prior to the pandemic, currency volatility was half that of 2016 and bond
market vol had subsided too.
What has diverged from the VIX of late is the tech-heavy Nasdaq's implied
volatility <.VXN> - now showing some of the biggest volatility premia over the
wider market in 16 years. Whether that's regulatory fears under a Democratic
government or greater use of options to bet on their continued upside is
debatable - but some see churn ahead when the election and the pandemic move
into the rear view mirror.
"A Biden win could be the moment to shift away from Big Tech - but not
necessarily for regulatory reasons," Sheets said, adding a fiscal stimulus and a
vaccine would steepen the yield curve and hasten the end of the "abnormal
economic environment" that has disproportionately benefited Big Tech.
(The author is editor-at-large for finance and markets at Reuters News. Any
views expressed here are his own)
(By Mike Dolan, Twitter: @reutersMikeD; Editing by Peter Graff)
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