‘The risks are now off the table’: Wall Street
looks forward to Biden presidency
Without control of both the House and Senate, Biden’s
high spending proposals are less likely to get through legislature
Edward
Helmore
Fri 6 Nov
2020 13.00 GMTLast modified on Fri 6 Nov 2020 13.02 GMT
Wall Street is supposed to hate uncertainty but as the
fight over the presidential contest continues, investors couldn’t be happier.
If, as
appears likely, Joe Biden wins, he will become the first president since George
HW Bush to enter office without control of both the House and Senate – an
outcome that indicates at least two years of legislative gridlock.
It’s a
scenario Wall Street appears to love. One that may give Republicans in the
Senate little incentive to enact a new, larger coronavirus stimulus package
that Democrats have hoped for and the power to block tax increases, big
spending programs and tougher regulations.
Stocks
jumped again on Thursday, the first time since 1982 that the Dow and S&P
500 rose at least 1% on four straight sessions, giving the stock indices their
biggest weekly gains since April, with the Dow up 7.1% week, the S&P 500
and Nasdaq up 7.4% and 9% in the week to date.
Oliver
Jones, senior markets economist at Capital Economics, told the Guardian:
“There’s definitely some relief that things like tougher tax policy, tougher
corporate reforms look to be off the table without democrats having more control
over congress.”
“Essentially,
it’s going to look more like a continuation of the status quo, which is the
outcome favoured by most firms,” Jones added.
Brad
McMillan, chief investment officer at Commonwealth Financial Network,
attributed some of the gains to the election’s smooth running and,
notwithstanding legal challenges, the likelihood of an imminent outcome.
Looking
forward, McMillan told the Guardian, markets were encouraged by prospects that
a Biden administration’s more progressive, high spending proposals are less
likely to get through a politically-split legislature.
“Biden’s
economic plan included substantial new corporate taxes and capital gains taxes,
all of which would have been very disruptive to the market,” McMillan said.
“The risks from a blue wave and a green new deal are now off the table.”
Wharton
professor of finance Jeremy Siegel also welcomed the result, even as the final
outcome of the presidential election remained unresolved. “Truthfully that
combination is excellent for the economy and it’s excellent for the markets,”
Siegel told CNBC on Wednesday
Market
enthusiasm for a split government has historical roots going back decades. In
2018, after voters handed control of the lower House to Democrats in the
midterm elections, markets soared.
“The better
performing periods are periods where the houses were split in terms of
leadership,” financial adviser Mellody Hobson noted at the time.
Since
Tuesday, markets have also been buoyed up by the prospect of government
infrastructure spending that could also pump billions of taxpayer dollars into
an overhaul of the nation’s energy and transportation systems.
For big
tech, which is facing antitrust investigations under the Trump administration,
the political scenario could also be rosy. Ahead of the election, FAANG
(Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google) stocks, in particular, showed
jitters after months of impressive pandemic gains.
“The Street
appears to have gotten the ‘Goldilocks election outcome’ for tech stocks with
no ‘blue wave’ expected (Senate staying red) and a likely Biden White House now
on the horizon,” said Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities in an investors note on
Thursday.
“With the
Republicans likely to control the Senate, the chances of major legislative
changes to antitrust law now is off the table in the eyes of investors which
posed the biggest risks to tech stalwarts with a ripple impact across the
sector,” Ives added.
Ives said
the likely election outcome is a “green light to buy tech stocks” and predicted
that big tech stocks could rally another 10% to 15% into year-end. “We continue
to be bullish on owning the secular growth stories for 2021,” he wrote.


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