It turned out to be a category two blue wave, not the Category four or five one Democrats had hoped for.
The Democrats picked up 28 seats in the House of Representatives but lost two in the Senate.
The one-liner here is that the most generous corporate tax cuts in US history are frozen in place for two more years. That is good for the economy and good for stocks.
You have to laugh at some of the stories that started filing in on Tuesday. In Brooklyn, NY election, officials called the fire department to break down the door of the polling place because they had the wrong keys. Polls everywhere ran out of ballots, while others suffered voting machine breakdowns.
Not so here in Nevada where everything ran flawlessly. My smiling face was safely stored in the Washoe County voter database and a backup paper ballot was created for good measure. No Russians here! Nevada now has two Democratic Senators for the first time in history.
Fortunately, I am old enough to have taken a civics class in high school which has not been taught in public schools for decades. A year working in the White House Press Corps (during the Reagan era) gives me additional perspective.
It shows. According to a recent survey, only 27% of Americans can identify all three branches of the federal government (executive, legislative, and the judicial).
The responsibility, therefore, falls to me to explain the outcome of yesterday’s midterm election and the trading and investment implications therein.
With the Democrats winning the House of Representatives and the Republicans controlling the Senate, we are about to enter the golden age of gridlock.
It is now impossible for any new law to be passed at the federal level. The only way it could is if they agreed on something, but so far, the two parties have shown little propensity to do so. They might as well be chalk and cheese.
Even if they did jointly pass a bill, it could still be vetoed by president Trump. Can you really see Donald Trump signing a bill sponsored by Nancy Pelosi? Given his preference for disruption, I would say there is a little chance of that happening.
The Democrats now have a crucial power and that is complete control of the purse strings. If Trump wants to spend anything at all, it can only be with Democratic approval.
It is highly unlikely that the Democrats will not approve ANY expansion of the debt ceiling, given the enormous increases in government spending Trump has inspired.
You can certainly expect the growth of defense spending to slow, if not stop completely, so avoid these stocks like the plague, like Raytheon (RTN), Lockheed Martin (LMT), Northrop Grumman (NOC), and Honeywell (HON).
This perfectly sets up a number of government shutdowns in the coming two years. Each one of these will bring a 10% stock market correction, but probably not much more. This was the case when Republicans shut down the government under President Obama sometime for weeks.
Control of the Senate isn’t really all that important. Once one branch of government is gone, the legislative calendar grinds to a halt. It does retain for the president the right to appoint judges. But that really involves social issues, not market ones, and will have no market impact. I can’t think of any big business issues coming up before the Supreme Court.
You can count on the House to resurrect the investigation of Russian influence in the 2016 election which was put to sleep with no findings by the Republicans nearly a year ago. On the first day in office, the new Democratic majority will subpoena Donald Trump’s tax returns. Long in hiding like the Loch Ness monster and bigfoot, they will finally see the light of day.
An impeachment motion against Trump will almost certainly pass the House but it won’t be anything more than a symbolic gesture. Without a two-thirds vote in the Senate, it will go nowhere. I doubt it will even come up for a vote.
The House can also use the Congressional Review Act to roll back any Trump administration rule it doesn’t like, which is pretty much all of them. Just last week, Trump said he could overturn a constitutional amendment with an executive order.
Expect the courts to get clogged with litigation on everything. Oil companies will be the big victims here. Avoid Exxon (XOM), Chevron (CVX), and Devon Energy (DVN). Their free pass on environmental regulation is about to end.
And while the tax cuts have been frozen on place, so is the steep upward trajectory of the growth of government debt. Borrowing is expected to top $1.4 trillion next year, levels not seen since the Great Recession. That means the Golden Age of short selling in the bond market, now 2 ½-year-old, has many more years to run. Keep selling the United States Treasury Bond Fund (TLT) on rallies and buy the (TBT) on dips.
The figures belie the massive leftwing swing that has taken place in the nation. West Virginia went for Trump by 43 points in 2016 but just reelected a Democratic Senator, Joe Manchin. In Colorado, they elected the first openly gay governor. The Republicans only won the Senate in Arizona because the Green Party split the vote, taking 2.2%.
Where Republicans did win, it was only by razor-thin margins, seeing 2016 leads disappear from double digits to tenths of a percent across the country, as we saw in Florida and Texas. That sets up and interesting 2020 where demographic change alone should be enough to tip the balance leftward. Oh, and we will be in recession by then too.
Fortunately, you will be rewarded for your long suffering during the campaign which saw an unwelcome 46% increase in negative advertising. Markets have delivered an average 8.5% return in every fourth quarter since 1980 and are up 89% of the time. Since WWII, every midterm election has generated an eye-popping 14.5% average return in the following 12 months.
And now for the bad news: the 2020 presidential campaign starts tomorrow, and we won’t know who the Democratic candidate is until TWO MONTHS BEFORE THE ELECTION!