Survival Guide To U.S. Politics 2017: Dollar And Equity Investing

 | May 18, 2017 12:25

by Chaim Siegel of Elazar Advisors, LLCh2 Survival Guide To US Politics 2017/h2

The media has President Trump in the corner, body blow after body blow. He’s getting beat up. We’d expect the rest of the year to be more of the same.

It could also get worse. Still, even with the uncertainty this could bring to the markets, investors have a chance to do well this year. We’ll explain.

h3 Equity Markets During Clinton And Nixon/h3

As soon as we hear impeachment, heads swivel to the Clinton and Nixon sagas.

Most of the news about President Bill Clinton’s scandals broke in 1998. It just so happens that 1998 also had one of the worst stock bear markets in our recent history. That crash however was blamed on both global markets, including Russia and South America, along with a slowing domestic economy.

During October 1973, President Richard Nixon carried out the famous “Saturday Night Massacre” when he fired a special prosecutor (sound familiar?) who was looking into the events surrounding a break-in at the Democratic National Committee's Watergate headquarters. President Nixon resigned from his position in August 1974. The Dow plunged from about 5000 to about 3000 during that time.

In the Nixon era too, most of the blame for the crash was directed at economics rather than politics. In that period Nixon ended the gold standard, gold’s convertibility to dollars, which hit the dollar. The oil crisis also spiked inflation during that time.

While both crashes—in 1974 and in 1998—weren’t blamed directly on impeachment procedures or politics, they did happen coincidentally.

Markets will probably associate political risk with downward momentum, which can cause volatility for us.

h3 Is Trump Good For Markets Or Not?/h3

Remember that ahead of the November elections analysts were expecting a market crash on a Trump win.

Yesterday, former CEO of GE, Jack Welch told CNBC that an impeachment proceeding would “blow the market away.”

So which is it? Is Trump good for markets or not?

Markets will certainly react to news. It was surprising the markets didn’t react until yesterday, since we've been hearing so much news about Russian connections for months now.

Investors likely aren’t panicking on the news but rather using the news as a mechanism for typical profit taking.

Unless we were to see economic statistics like GDP and jobs or earnings fall off a cliff, the market has strong underlying fundamentals.

Investors can use these not-so-panicky dips to build positions.

h3 Underlying Market Fundamentals Solid/h3
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Factset reported that earnings were up 13.6% in Q1, the strongest in six years.

Jobs have been pushing the economy up and May jobless claims appear stronger than April's numbers.

For GDP, The Atlanta Fed , is expecting a pick-up from Q1’s .7% to 4.1% in Q2.

Again, if these core market fundamental indicators were shaky, we'd need to worry about pile-on risk from politics. Since they're not, we can use political scare-days as buying opportunities.

h3 Dollar Risk/h3

While markets may not be as tied to politics, the dollar can be. We do expect politics to have a greater impact on the dollar.