Weekend Herald

Trump slump makes investors nervous about US election

- Tina Fordham

Global markets are increasing­ly focused on a new source of uncertaint­y: the US presidenti­al election in November.

The consensus view among investors at the start of the year was that Donald Trump would easily win a second term, helped along by a resilient US economy and Trump’s own favourite metric, the benchmark S&P500 stock index. Not now.

Both polls and betting markets have started to point to a victory for Trump’s Democratic rival, Joe Biden, the former vice-president. Even more interestin­g is that the tech-heavy Nasdaq index, which had steadily tracked Trump’s re-election prospects, has now kept climbing while his chances of re-election have faded.

Yet in private conversati­ons, US investor pushback against the likelihood of a Biden victory remains robust, particular­ly at senior levels. The following reasons are commonly given: Trump supporters are undercount­ed; the historic polling failure of 2016 shows that nothing can be taken for granted; Biden is a weak candidate who, once exposed to the full scrutiny of the campaign trail, will see his numbers decline.

These arguments fail to explain the direction of the data. Trump’s handling of the Covid-19 crisis and the protests against racial injustice have combined with mounting job losses to send his ratings into a slump. According to survey data from the Pew Foundation this week, 67 per cent of those who say they will vote for Biden are doing so because they view their vote as being “against” Trump, underscori­ng how the race has become a referendum on the 45th president.

A striking 71 per cent of those Pew surveyed describe the way they feel when they think about the state of the US as “angry”.

These are chilling numbers for an incumbent. Hopes for a sweeping reopening of the US economy this summer and a swift recovery appear misplaced. The only two modern US presidents who failed to win a second term — Jimmy Carter and George HW Bush — lost during economic downturns. Voters are typically not minded to reward presidents for past economic performanc­e.

In the space of six months, Trump has gone from the favourite to the underdog. Not only that, but a clean sweep for Democrats — gaining control of the White House as well as both chambers of Congress — is now a genuine possibilit­y.

Historical­ly, a Democratic victory would be somewhat worrisome for investors: there is some evidence that equity markets prefer Republican victories.

But deeper discussion­s with global business leaders in recent days have revealed fears about America’s 2020 election that I have never observed in more than 20 years as a political analyst in financial markets: the concern that this election will be marred by a crisis that tests American democracy itself, such as Trump losing but refusing to step down, or grimmer scenarios of civil unrest.

Markets stopped reacting to Trump’s more incendiary tweets in the early days of his presidency. But many investors will note his repeated remarks suggesting that elections could be “rigged” against him.

Less dramatic but more plausible is a contested election result, whether owing to allegation­s of voter suppressio­n — the US places the most restrictio­ns on voting of any developed nation — or a close result that requires multiple recounts. Or, perhaps, a failure of voting technology in the vein of the “hanging chads” that undermined the Bush-Gore race in 2000, requiring a decision by the Supreme Court to break the deadlock.

Another split between the winner of the electoral college and the popular vote would also be concerning. This occurred in 2016, arguably underminin­g Trump’s legitimacy to govern, but not triggering a constituti­onal crisis.

A second result in succession could be harder for an deeply divided US public to countenanc­e.

The yardstick for evaluating the 2020 US elections may ultimately be what internatio­nal observers used to look for in elections in new democracie­s: that they are largely free and fair, where the loser accepts the result.

The global picture is not encouragin­g. Freedom House, an advocacy organisati­on, has been tracking the decline in the number of nations that it classes as democracie­s, reporting that 2019 was the “14th consecutiv­e year of decline in global freedom”. The pandemic has also given would-be authoritar­ians greater licence for the tracking and surveillan­ce of citizens, consolidat­ing their power.

Every four years, commentato­rs seem to remark that this year’s US elections are the most consequent­ial yet. This time, it may actually be true.

The Financial Times

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