The Daily Telegraph

Prepare for rerun of Trump v Biden election turbulence, City investors told

- By Lucy Burton

CHIEF executives and investors are being warned to prepare for instabilit­y around the US election, with a rerun of Donald Trump versus Joe Biden threatenin­g to bring an unusually high level of uncertaint­y.

Tina Fordham, who was the chief global political analyst at Wall Street giant Citigroup before launching her own consultanc­y, said the “prospect of an unconteste­d result is lower than for any of the five American elections I’ve covered profession­ally”.

Ms Fordham, who is also an adviser to the Ministry of Defence, said: “We are advising clients not to expect a clear result. The US electorate is more polarised than ever, with record low trust across all institutio­ns, and AI deepfakes and other forms of election interferen­ce are likely to play a role that we’ve never seen before.”

She warned that disputes, re-counts and even a Supreme Court referral are highly plausible. All are likely to have a chilling effect on economic activity by throwing the future direction of policy into doubt.

City economists have also warned that the US election risks blowing their forecasts off course.

Paul Danis, head of asset allocation at one of Britain’s largest wealth managers, RBC Brewin Dolphin, said Mr Trump’s return and sticky inflation were the two greatest threats to the investment outlook.

Mr Danis said: “The political backdrop is a risk. Looking at the election models, Trump has a very small lead. He has threatened to slap 60pc tariffs on China, and 10pc tariffs on all other countries. That would certainly mark an escalation from his first term.”

While stock markets rose during Mr Trump’s first term in the White House, Mr Danis said the backdrop now was very different amid growing concern over the US deficit.

Analysts at Goldman Sachs also warned clients that a victory for Mr Trump in November would be bad for European stock markets.

Europe-listed equities have risen 12pc over the past six months but this rally could be scuppered by “rising geopolitic­al risks”.

Ms Fordham said: “Expecting the fog to lift and clarity to descend from Washington on November 6, the day after US elections, is wishful thinking.”

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