Global markets made solid gains after President Joe Biden dropped out of the 2024 presidential election Sunday and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris as the Democratic nominee.
European stocks saw an uptick and premarket trading in the US was higher following Bidenโs announcement.
Dow futures rose 40 points, or 0.1%. S&P 500 futures were up 0.5% and Nasdaq future were 0.8% higher. European markets were higher, and Asian markets closed mostly lower. US Treasuries rose slightly early Monday, trimming yields, and the dollar was softer against major currencies.
Significant doubt about Bidenโs ability to beat former President Donald Trump led Wall Street to begin to price in a Trump victory in November. That became apparent with so-called Trump trades, in which investors bought up stocks they believed Trumpโs tariff-heavy agenda could benefit โ and they likewise sold off stocks related to green energy and other industries traders believed Trumpโs policies could hurt.
Meanwhile, a large number of economists have predicted Trumpโs policies wouldย make Americaโs inflation problem worse, and he would balloon the US deficit. As Trumpโs fortunes appeared to advance in recent weeks, US Treasury prices fell and yields rose, which they often do in anticipation of higher inflation.
With the Democratic party now apparently coalescing around Vice President Kamala Harris as its likely nominee, some of those Trump trades could begin to unwind โ or at least go on hiatus until new polling begins to show whether or not Harris appears to stand a better chance against Trump than Biden did.
With fewer than 100 days until the US election in November, Sundayโs upheaval could have sent uncertain investors into a worry spiral. But โthe fact that Biden endorsed Kamala Harris reduces uncertainty,โ said Jay Hatfield, CEO at Infrastructure Capital Advisors. He expects a muted market reaction instead.
โThere may be a small unwinding of the Trump trade on Mondayย as Vice President Harris is perceived to have a slightly better chance of winning,โ Hatfield added.
Uncertainty remains
Last week was exceptionally rough for markets. The S&P 500 notched its worst three-day performance of 2024 and Europeโs STOXX 600 logged its worst weekly performance since October.
Some analysts worry that market churn could continue as we get closer to the election.
โMarkets are increasingly focused on the US presidential election in November,โ wrote Deutsche Bankโs Henry in a research note on Monday. โBut thereโs heightened uncertainty about the outcome, particularly after President Biden has just become the first incumbent President to withdraw since Lyndon Johnson in 1968.โ
Moreover, the S&P 500 has declined in every September since 2020, he noted. Over the last three years, September was the worst month of the year for the index.
Still, markets remain unusually strong. The S&P 500 has been higher for 28 of the last 38 weeks, something we havenโt seen exceeded since 1989.
Stocks tumbledย toward the end of last week as a turbulent election cycle and a global tech outage rocked technology stocks in particular.
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