Wall Street wants drama-free presidential debate, watching comportment
as much as policy
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[June 27, 2024] By
Sinéad Carew
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors watching the first live debate of the
2024 election race on Thursday hope to hear U.S. President Joe Biden and
his predecessor Donald Trump argue thoughtful positions on fiscal
policy, tariffs and taxes, while closely monitoring their mental acuity.
For the debate at CNN studios in Atlanta without an in-person audience,
many on Wall Street are looking for the ageing candidates to prove they
are sharp enough for four years in the White House.
Democrat Biden and Republican Trump are the oldest-ever major party
White House contenders, noted TS Lombard managing director Grace Fan,
who wrote that if either candidate seems less than capable it could
"shake up a dead-heat race."
"The nightmare scenario for investors would be if neither candidate
seems up for the job," said Robert Phipps, director at Per Stirling in
Austin, Texas.
His concern is if Biden, 81, seems too old or "lethargic" or 78-year old
Trump engages in "too many nonsensical rants."
While markets tend to be politically indifferent according to Phipps,
the big fear is change, which introduces uncertainty.
Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Cresset Capital in Chicago wants
to see "a rational inside-the-lines debate."
"I'm not looking for drama," said Ablin. "In many respects this debate
personifies this country's election process ... If it's just chaos and
somebody walks off the stage and it just can't be done, it sends a
terrible message to the American people and the world."
Wall Street especially wants to hear how Biden and Trump plan to deal
with a stack of problems including a soaring budget deficit, high
interest rates and slowing but still-high inflation as well as signs of
economic slowing along with thorny trade relations with countries such
as China.
Paul Christopher, head of global investment strategy at Wells Fargo
Investment Institute, sees investors reacting best to measured plans for
tackling these problems.
[to top of second column] |
Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden
answers a question as President Donald Trump listens during the
second and final presidential debate at the Curb Event Center at
Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S., October 22, 2020.
Morry Gash/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
"In general the markets are looking for each candidate to come out
reasonable and not extreme sounding," said Christopher. "If the
debate were to descend into personal acrimony that would be a bad
sign for compromise and collaboration. Part of being capable of
running the country is demonstrating a willingness to compromise
with the other side."
Both Biden and Trump have favored a tough trade stance by imposing
and threatening tariffs, on China in particular. But investors are
leery about the impact of tariffs on inflation.
"We'd expect the market to react positively if either candidate was
to temper his enthusiasm for tariffs and trade restrictions, said
Christopher.
Regarding fiscal policy Cresset's Ablin notes that interest payments
on U.S. borrowing is catching up with defense spending with $866
billion spent on defense in the 12 months through May versus $836
billion in interest payments.
He wants "one of the candidates to offer some leadership on fiscal
responsibility and a recognition that our current fiscal spending
path is unsustainable."
The first debate, over five months before the election, may not move
financial markets according to Carl Ludwigson, managing director at
Bel Air Investment Advisors. At most, he said, a dominant candidate
could start to move the odds of whether Republicans or Democrats
win.
"In the first round or two of the fight nobody is going in for a
knockout yet. They're just trying to get the feel for the other
boxer," JJ Kinahan, CEO of brokerage IG North America said.
"The market's going to be a very interested observer making sure
neither one falls down in the first round. I don't think you win the
election in this debate but you could lose it. You could do more bad
than good."
(Reporting By Sinéad Carew, Carolina Mandl, Chuck Mikolajczak in New
York; Editing by Alden Bentley and David Gregorio)
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