The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Impeachmen­t probe isn’t driving stock decline

- By Stan Choe and Alex Veiga AP Business Writers

NEW YORK >> President Donald Trump is falsely suggesting that Thursday’s stock market decline was driven primarily by the impeachmen­t inquiry.

The S&P 500 was down about 0.5% as the House convened to vote on the ground rules for its impeachmen­t inquiry and eventually closed with a decline of 0.3%. Analysts say investors likely had other issues in mind as they sold stocks.

A look at Trump’s claim on Twitter as stocks dropped a day after setting their second record this week:

TRUMP: “The Impeachmen­t Hoax is hurting our Stock Market. The Do Nothing Democrats don’t care!”

THE FACTS: Trump neglects to mention the factors that Wall Street experts say really moved the market.

The stock market is more concerned with the U.S.- China trade war, the strength of the global and U.S. economy, interest rates and corporate profits than the impeachmen­t inquiry.

For instance, on Thursday, analysts pinned the market’s drop largely on a weak report on business activity in the Midwest and worries about the trade war with China that Trump himself began.

Since House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., announced a formal impeachmen­t inquiry on Sept. 24, the S&P 500 has risen 2.4%, and it reached record highs twice this week.

It’s tough to tease out for certain the impact of the impeachmen­t proceeding­s given all the moving parts that go into setting stock prices. But many investors on Wall Street see impeachmen­t having only a modest effect at most, and one unlikely to last for long.

That’s chief ly because few see a real threat of Trump ultimately getting removed from office by Congress. Even if the House impeaches the president for asking another country to investigat­e a political opponent, investors tend to believe the Republican-controlled Senate will likely acquit him. That would mean Trump and his lower-tax, less-regulation approach that markets like is unlikely to leave the White House, at least until after the next election.

“Yes, investors are aware of it, but it doesn’t have any direct policy implicatio­ns right now,” Kate Warne, chief investment strategist at Edward Jones, said about the inquiry.

When asked where it ranks in the list of concerns for the stock market, Eric Freedman, the chief investment officer at U.S. Bank Wealth Management, reels off other issues, such as interest-rate policy, economic growth trends, corporate profits and trade wars.

“I would put impeachmen­t issues at the bottom of that stack,” Freedman said.

One risk investors do see is that the impeachmen­t inquiry leaves less oxygen for other discussion­s on Capitol Hill. Does it lengthen the timeline for reaching a trade deal with China, for example? Does it snuff out hopes that Washington could pass legislatio­n on prescripti­on drug pricing or infrastruc­ture?

Investors would also like to see progress on the trade agreement involving the United States, Mexico and Canada, known as USMCA. There, though, the impeachmen­t inquiry may provide a counterint­uitive boon.

“Is it possible that both Republican­s and Democrats now want to hurry through the USMCA deal as a way to show some positive chips with constituen­ts who, on one side of the aisle or another, are not happy with impeachmen­t?” asked Paul Christophe­r, head of global market strategy for Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

Past impeachmen­ts have affected the stock market, but only temporaril­y. Investors eventually returned their focus to what really matters for a stock’s price: howmuch profit a company is making and whether that will rise or fall in the future.

In 1974, an energy crisis and recession were what drove the stock market lower, not President Richard Nixon’s resignatio­n, strategist­s at Citi Private Bank wrote in a recent report.

In 1998, the S&P 500 sank sharply on the day that Independen­t Counsel Kenneth Starr delivered his report to Congress on possible impeachabl­e offenses by President Bill Clinton. But worries about slumping economies abroad were the bigger concern for investors at the time.

Stocks would eventually rise, even after the House voted to impeach Clinton, until they blew up in the 2000 dot-com bubble.

“The Impeachmen­t Hoax is hurting our Stock Market. The Do Nothing Democrats don’t care!”

— President Donald Trump

 ?? RICHARD DREW—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Oct. 21, 2019, file photo specialist­s James Denaro, left center, and Gregg Maloney, right center, work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. President Donald Trump said Thursday, Oct. 31, that the impeachmen­t inquiry is hurting the stock market. While it’s tough to tease out its impact for certain given all the given all the moving parts that go into setting stock prices, many investors on Wall Street see it having only a modest effect, and one unlikely to last for long.
RICHARD DREW—ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Oct. 21, 2019, file photo specialist­s James Denaro, left center, and Gregg Maloney, right center, work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. President Donald Trump said Thursday, Oct. 31, that the impeachmen­t inquiry is hurting the stock market. While it’s tough to tease out its impact for certain given all the given all the moving parts that go into setting stock prices, many investors on Wall Street see it having only a modest effect, and one unlikely to last for long.

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