The Star Late Edition

After health care loss, investor faith in Trump wavers

- Megan Davies and Chuck Mikolajcza­k

US STOCKS slid yesterday amid concerns that Republican President Donald Trump may struggle to push a sweeping overhaul of the tax code through Congress in the wake of his party’s failure last week to pass broad health care legislatio­n.

Trump’s pledge to cut taxes, including a lowering of the rates paid by corporatio­ns, was a pillar of his 2016 presidenti­al campaign and provided much of the fuel for the heady stock market rally that followed his November 8 victory.

The White House has sought to refocus attention on that part of Trump’s agenda since the collapse on Friday of a Republican bill to reshape the US health care system largely by gutting Democratic former President Barack Obama’s 2010 health care law.

“The markets aren’t really concerned about health care,” said Randy Frederick, managing director of trading and derivative­s for Charles Schwab in Austin, Texas. “What the markets are concerned about is tax policy. So now the more important issue has come to the forefront. The question is, will they be able to get that done? I don’t know.”

The major US stock indexes were down, with the S&P 500 0.3 percent lower, while benchmark 10-year Treasury notes were up 11/32 in price for a yield of 2.36 percent after hitting a one-month low in yield earlier. Analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a research note that a tax bill, “if passed at all, could be a very watered-down version of current proposals.”

The US tax code has not undergone a major overhaul since 1986 during Republican former President Ronald Reagan’s administra­tion, and there is tacit acknowledg­ement in both parties that some changes are needed, especially in terms of easing the burdens of middle-class Americans.

Democrats, however, are opposed to tax cuts for the rich. They also fought Republican former President George W Bush’s tax changes that they said rewarded the wealthiest Americans.

That means Republican­s, who control Congress and the White House for the first time in a decade, may have to vote as a bloc to pass the tax plan that investors would most want, something far less certain after the health care bill debacle.

Trump and House of Representa­tives Speaker Paul Ryan were unable to keep Republican lawmakers in line for the health care legislatio­n. They pulled it off the House floor after a rebellion by the most conservati­ve Republican lawmakers who argued that parts of it were too similar to the Obamacare law it was meant to replace as well as moderates who worried about the number of Americans who would lose health insurance. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? President Donald Trump may struggle to push a sweeping overhaul of the tax code through Congress.
PHOTO: AP President Donald Trump may struggle to push a sweeping overhaul of the tax code through Congress.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa