The Pak Banker

First US presidenti­al debate fails to move investors

- SAN FRANCISCO -AFP

US stock futures fluctuated slightly but markets and investors were largely stoic as an acrimoniou­s first debate between U.S. presidenti­al candidates ended on Tuesday. Republican President Donald Trump repeatedly interrupte­d Democratic rival Joe Biden in the Cleveland debate, the first ahead of the Nov. 3 U.S. presidenti­al election, that touched on Trump's taxes, the economy, the coronaviru­s pandemic and election integrity.

While betting odds makers showed little change in the odds as the debate progressed, U.S. stock futures EScv1 initially rose as much as 0.6% before turning to be flat. "Right now it looks like an even split between Trump and Biden, so it is difficult for the markets to move," said Ayako Sera, a market strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank in Tokyo. "What people are most concerned about is the fairness of the election and how it will be carried out." Biden, 77, has held a consistent lead over Trump, 74, in national opinion polls, although surveys in the battlegrou­nd states that will decide the election show a closer contest.

The dollar index against a basket of currencies =USD was flat at 93.817. With more than a million Americans already casting early ballots and time running out to change minds or influence the small sliver of undecided voters, the debate showed the men trading barbs rather than moving the needle on investor perception.

The first of three scheduled debates came at a fraught moment on Wall Street. The S&P 500 . SPX tumbled around 10% from record highs this month before recently paring some of those losses as investors worried about a prolonged recovery from the coronaviru­s and uncertaint­y related to the presidenti­al vote. Many investors view Biden as more likely to raise taxes, and see a second term for Trump, who favors tax cuts and deregulati­on, as better for the overall stock market. At the same time, a Trump win could spark concerns over ramped up tensions between Washington and Beijing.

In the run-up to the 2016 election, investors widely predicted that a Trump victory would hurt stocks due to his unpredicta­bility and trade-war threats against China and Mexico. However, the S&P 500 surged 5% in the month following his unexpected election win in what was dubbed the "Trump trade", as investors bet Trump would cut taxes and regulation, and boost infrastruc­ture spending. "The markets almost always think they favor a Republican but did just fine under Clinton and Obama. There is comfort in that hindsight perspectiv­e regardless of what happens," said Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa, Oklahoma, as he watched the debate.

With expectatio­ns that the increased use of mail-in ballots by voters concerned about the coronaviru­s could mean no immediate winner is announced, S&P 500 options show investors are bracing for volatility in November and December.Trump declined last week to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses, and said he expected the election battle to end up before the Supreme Court.

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump and Democratic rival Joe Biden battled over the economy - and everything else - at their first ever head-tohead debate on Tuesday. Trump said the United States is coming back "incredibly well" from the coronaviru­s shutdown, but Biden suggested it wasn't working right now for "all the small towns and working class towns in America."

"We had 10.4 million people in a four-month period that we've put back in the workforce. That's a record the likes of which nobody's ever seen before.... Our country is coming back incredibly well," Trump said. U.S. businesses did add 10.6 million jobs from April to August, Labor Department data shows, a record four-month period.

However, that's also just under half the 22.1 million jobs lost from February to April, as the coronaviru­s led to shutdowns of schools and offices nationwide. Employment in U.S. manufactur­ing - a sector that Trump said Tuesday he had revived - is 720,000 jobs short of February's level. "Millionair­es and billionair­es like him...have done very well," Biden said of Trump. The combined wealth of billionair­es jumped in the weeks after the coronaviru­s lockdowns, the Institute for Policy Studies found. Biden claimed Trump has "done nothing to help small businesses." Trump signed Congress' $2.3 trillion pandemic relief package in March, which created the Paycheck Protection Program that distribute­d about $525 billion in forgivable loans to more than 5 million small businesses.

The program expired before it was fully tapped out, leaving $130 billion unused. Federal Reserve officials have sounded loud warnings in recent days that much needed to be done to keep small businesses afloat. "We handed him a booming economy.

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