After 16 days of high drama, bluster, and handwringing, the Great Washington Shutdown of 2013 is finally over. President Obama held fast and won. The Republicans kept changing their goals by the day and lost.
But what we got was anything but a resolution. The next shutdown is now scheduled for January 15, and the Treasury bond default has been pushed back to March, 2014.
The big winners in all of this have been stock investors. In the wake of the midnight deal, the S&P 500 blasted through to a new all time high. Those who called Republican bluff to crash the economy if Obamacare wasn?t ditched were richly rewarded.
The world was hoping for a Washington induced 10% sell off in shares so they could buy more. In the end, they only got a 4.6% dip, and were forced to chase for the umpteenth time this year. It all has the hallmark of a market that seriously wants to go higher.
So are we going to have to endure all of this again in the New Year?
I doubt it. The Republicans have been severely chastened and are unlikely to push their luck so far next time. Their standing in opinion polls has fallen to all time lows. According to Arizona Senator John McCain, ?we are now down to only paid staff and close family members.? The Democrats have been rewarded for standing fast, and therefore will continue to do so. Missing here is the detonator basis for another freeze in government spending.
The market may be so strong in January that investors may not even notice further antics in our nation?s capitol. Individuals and institutions are still massively underweight equities. The great rotation out of bonds into stocks never really happened this year. Instead, investors sold bonds, but moved the money into cash. Next year, the Great Rotation may really begin in earnest.
This presages a tidal wave of capital flows into stock in the New Year, which could run all the way until March. Expect a strong December, as traders try to front run this move. Extra juice will come from the Federal Reserve, which now has to postpone any taper for another 6-9 months, thanks to the economic slowdown induced by the shutdown. It seems that Ben Bernanke saw it all coming.
Paying readers of this letter are already well aware of my bullish view of stocks (click here for ?Why You Should Buy This Dip?, and ?My 2013 Stock Market Outlook?). If you are still starved for reasons to load the boat with equities, please click here for ?Why US Stocks Are Dirt Cheap?.
All of this makes my yearend target for the S&P 500 of 1,780 a chip shot. It also makes 2014 look pretty good, when I think the index could possibly run up to 2,000.