In the hours after the president is Puri for Rent (2025)elected, equity investors need to brace for volatility. What they shouldn’t do is panic.
That’s because regardless of how prices react on Nov. 9, next-day moves in the S&P 500 Index are useless in telling what comes after. While the index swings an average 1.5 percent the day after the vote, gains or losses over the first 24 hours predict the market’s direction 12 months later less than half the time.
This matters because the compulsion to act in the vote’s aftermath is often very strong -- stocks swing twice as violently as normal those days, data compiled by Bloomberg show. They plummeted 5 percent just after Barack Obama beat John McCain in 2008. But while nothing says Wednesday’s reaction won’t be a harbinger for the year, nothing says it will, either, and investors should think before doing anything rash.
“Trying to trade that is very difficult,” said Thomas Melcher, the Philadelphia-based chief investment officer at PNC Asset Management Group. “Even if the market sells off, if you have any reasonable time horizon, that should be a buying opportunity. The dust will settle and people will conclude the economy is OK.”
In the 22 elections going back to 1928, the S&P 500 has fallen 15 times the day after polls close, for an average loss of 1.8 percent. Stocks reversed course and moved higher over the next 12 months in nine of those instances, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
On Monday, futures on the S&P 500 expiring in December climbed 1.4 percent at 10:20 a.m. in London, after the FBI said Hillary Clinton didn’t commit a crime in her handling of e-mails as secretary of state.
Nothing shows the unreliability of first-day signals more than the routs that accompanied victories by Obama, whose election in the midst of the 2008 financial crisis preceded a two-day plunge in which more than $2 trillion of global share value was erased. It wasn’t much better in 2012, when Election Day was followed by a two-day drop that swelled to 3.6 percent in the S&P 500, at the time the worst drop in a year.
Of course, Obama has been anything but bad for equities -- or at least, he hasn’t gotten in their way. The S&P 500 has posted an average annual gain of 13.3 percent since Nov. 4, 2008, better than nine of the previous 12 administrations. Data like that imply investors struggle to process the meaning of a new president just after Election Day, or infuse the winner with greater influence than they have.
“Some people are probably going to overreact, and there will be other investors trying to second-guess what those investors are doing,” said David Brown, a professor of finance at the University of Wisconsin School of Business, in Madison, Wisconsin. “There is a salience of short-term events, particularly bad events, that lead people to react to short-term information.”
Swings in industries are no more prescient than the broader market. The S&P 500 Health Care Index declined 3.6 percent the day after Obama first won; since then it’s the stock market’s third-best performing group with a 149 percent advance. Also meaningless is the victor’s party. The median S&P 500 gain in Democratic terms since 1928 has been 27.7 percent, according to Leuthold Group LLC, compared with 27.3 percent under Republicans.
“The results suggest that policy differences between the parties are either fully reflected in stock prices by the time a candidate officially takes office, overwhelmed by larger cyclical forces, or fundamentally indistinguishable from one another,” said Doug Ramsey, the firm’s chief investment officer. “In practice, all three factors are likely at work.”
Infusing certain days and events with special meaning is a tradition on Wall Street, with everything from Santa Claus to the Super Bowl supposedly holding influence for share prices. Lots of people believe the direction of equities on Jan. 1 contains insights into how the year will go in stocks, but the system has no more predictive value than a coin toss.
Letting emotions rule investment decisions was a temptation that Erik Davidson resisted after the Brexit vote. On June 24, as the S&P 500 was plunging 3.6 percent on concern Britain’s vote would snarl trade and spur a global recession, the chief investment officer of Wells Fargo Private Bank said in a Bloomberg News story the selloff was a buying opportunity as investors overestimated the pain. Stocks are up 2.3 percent since he spoke.
“The markets could sell off if Trump wins, like we saw with Brexit, but we also saw how markets recovered,” said Davidson. “If Donald Trump is in office, it’s a concern, but there are so many other things that are going well and starting to turn the corner.”
That doesn’t mean it’ll all be smooth-sailing for stock investors. Equity volatility in the November of presidential election years has historically been 22 percent above the average for all months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg going back to the Herbert Hoover administration.
Since the outlook for rates and equities has lately been joined at the hip, that may be of interest to traders who are all but certain the Federal Reserve will hike rates in December. Since 1930, the S&P 500 has an average 30-day realized volatility of 19.2 in election-year Novembers, more than 20 percent higher than the historical average of 15.7.
Should the past prove to be prologue and volatility rise, the ride may seem even bumpier given the market’s current placidity. The S&P 500’s 30-day volatility registered at 16.8 on Monday, 55 percent below the average of all November months -- both in and out of election years.
“It’s fair to say no one knows what these candidates’ policy prescriptions are going to be and that uncertainty will resonate into volatility,” said Tim Courtney, chief investment officer of Exencial Wealth Advisors, which oversees $1.5 billion in assets in Oklahoma City.
Topics Elections
Letter from JerusalemThe Sartorial Kafka by Dan PiepenbringInterviewing Dame Iris by James AtlasLocal BusinessLetter from JerusalemNo More TearsSee the Patents for the First Successful TypewriterThe Morning News Roundup for July 16, 2014Reality BitesThe Morning News Roundup for June 23, 2014Rita Dove’s “Canary” by Chantal McStayHappy Birthday, Harold BloomNadine Gordimer, 1923–2014Fall Sweeps by Alexander AcimanFuture Library by Dan PiepenbringThe Greatest Artist in the Whole Wide WorldPhilosophy of the WorldThe Morning News Roundup for July 14, 2014The Morning News Roundup for June 30, 2014The Morning News Roundup for June 20, 2014 Who is Captain Britain? The secret history of the MCU's new superhero NBC's Peacock app was a popular Olympics download, but it was a mess Women's March 2018: All the best signs Gigabyte reportedly hit with ransomware attack How Facebook sound designers gave emoji a voice Michelle Williams' 'All the Money in the World' pay gap is a bummer Stunning photo of Jupiter's largest moon marks 10 years for Juno probe 'Free Guy' is a fun movie that doesn't quite get video games: Review The White House turned a shutdown away message into a political attack WhatsApp now allows you to move chat history between Android and iOS TikTok's new privacy features make teens think about their decisions A hotel has banned all bloggers after an escalating feud with this YouTuber Vine's been gone for a year, but we still think about these Vines every day NASA's Hubble Space Telescope spots a gem of a spiral galaxy How to take HDR photos on your iPhone Facebook shut down political ad research, daring the U.S. to regulate DeFi platform begs hackers to return $600 million in stolen crypto 'The Office' cast breaks down what it was like to film Meredith's hair on fire Paul Thomas Anderson doesn't really care for this horrible photo of him and Maya Rudolph Philadelphia goes wild after the Eagles make it to the Super Bowl
2.4167s , 10157.9140625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Puri for Rent (2025)】,Charm Information Network