Analysis: Investors' bold bets on Biden win pose market risk
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[October 24, 2020] By
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and April Joyner
NEW YORK (Reuters) - With less than two
weeks to go before the U.S. presidential election, investors may be
placing too much confidence in a decisive win by Democratic challenger
Joe Biden as his lead in opinion polls narrows.
Market participants have in recent weeks pulled back from bets that
would benefit from election-related volatility while piling into assets
that would benefit from a Biden win, including alternative energy shares
and cannabis stocks.
As Biden's lead has narrowed in recent days, some market watchers worry
that an unexpected victory by President Donald Trump, a Republican, or
an uncertain election outcome could force the type of violent
positioning unwinds that occurred in 2016, when investors were
overwhelmingly positioned for a Hillary Clinton presidency.
In betting markets, Trump's chances of winning the election increased
about 1 percentage point to 36.3% following Thursday's debate, but Biden
maintains a significant lead, with a 64.4% chance of winning the
election, according to data from RealClearPolitics.
"To some extent the markets are under-appreciating the likelihood of a
Trump rebound here," said Karl Schamotta, chief global strategist at
Cambridge Global Payments.
Following the election, traders expect the biggest market swings to
occur in equities. Among the assets vulnerable to violent moves is the
Invesco Solar ETF <TAN.P>. The exchange-traded fund has risen about 24%
over the last month as investors anticipate that clean energy policies
under a Biden administration would bode well for the sector.
Options prices suggest the ETF's shares could log a one-day move of as
much as 11% in either direction once the election results are out,
according to calculations by Christopher Murphy, co-head of derivatives
strategy at Susquehanna Financial Group.
The technology-heavy Invesco QQQ Trust Series 1 ETF <QQQ.P> and the S&P
500 tracking ETF SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust <SPY.P> are each primed for a
move of about 3% to 4%, Murphy said.
An unexpected Trump win could also hit currencies such as the Mexican
peso <MXN=> and Russian ruble <RUB=>, while boosting the battered U.S.
dollar, analysts said.
Utility firms, tax-exempt municipal bonds, industrials and material
stocks may also be vulnerable, said Justin Waring, investment strategist
at UBS Global Wealth Management.
Treasury yields, which move inversely to prices, rose to four-month
highs on Friday, a day after Biden and Trump squared off in a final
debate that some observers said was unlikely to improve the incumbent's
re-election prospects.
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U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden looks on as he
talks to reporters while leaving, following the final 2020 U.S.
presidential campaign debate, at Nashville International Airport in
Nashville, Tennessee, U.S., October 22, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis
Some investors believe a Biden win could usher in higher spending and weigh on
bonds.
Some market watchers have also noted that investors, while still far more hedged
against markets swings than in the 2016 election cycle, have pared bets on wild
stock market gyrations over the past two weeks.
S&P 500 options expiring in December are implying a more muted level of stock
swings than they did just two weeks ago, suggesting expectations for market
turmoil following the election have come in.
Equity and interest-rate options "are pricing in that Biden wins the
presidential election," said Amy Wu Silverman, equity derivatives strategist at
RBC Capital Markets. "They're fairly complacent on that, as well as the idea of
a 'blue sweep.'"
While the market fears of election-related volatility have receded somewhat, by
no means have investors sounded the all-clear signal. The Cboe Volatility Index,
known as Wall Street's "fear gauge," stands above 28, significantly higher than
the low to mid-teen range it was trading in just prior to the 2016 presidential
election.
An uncertain or contested election would likely result in even more sustained
volatility. The S&P 500 slipped as much as 10% in the weeks following the 2000
election, before the Supreme Court decided the hotly-contested battle between
George W. Bush and Al Gore for the presidency.
Such a period of uncertainty could hit the market's biggest winners, including
the technology and momentum stocks that have been a key driver of the S&P 500's
rebound, said Joseph Amato, president and chief investment officer of equities
at Neuberger Berman Group PLC.
"If you have a risk-off environment because of a contested election then you
probably have vulnerability on those stocks that have done the best," Amato
said. "Quite often in a risk-off scenario you often sell your big winners
first."
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and April Joyner; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili
and Nick Zieminski)
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