The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Making sense of the election from a market perspectiv­e

- By David Rath

As I write this, there is still not a declared winner in the 2020 election although it would appear that Joe Biden looks poised to secure the necessary 270 electoral votes.

Regardless of the ultimate outcome, the reaction from the stock market has been perplexing to most. Prior to November 3rd, a common concern was a Biden victory coupled with a stock market decline. Now that we have some more clarity (although still a decent amount of opacity), why would the market not only go up, but go up by a lot?

For starters, it is typically a futile effort to attempt to extract a reason for a market move. There are millions of market participan­ts with different opinions, investment objectives, and time frames. As I discussed in my blog, The Narrative Fallacy, human beings need to tell stories to make sense of the world around us. Assigning a reason to something allows us to simplify an incredibly complex system like the stock market into a narrative that just makes sense.

However, it is much more important to focus on *what* is happening rather than *why* it is happening. With that in mind, let’s look at what exactly happened in the last 72 hours.

Relative Winners

After cooling off since their peak on September 2nd, the big tech names came flying out of the gate at 9:30 AM on November 4th. The NASDAQ-100 index is up almost 10% this week with popular names like Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon leading the way.

This is interestin­g to note since it had been a relative underperfo­rmer leading up to the election. In fact, the Russell 2000 (small companies) outperform­ed both the S&P 500 and NASDAQ-100 by over 5% in the month of October. There was speculatio­n that this was institutio­ns positionin­g for a “blue wave” which would potentiall­y pave the way for easier stimulus spending.

Easier stimulus would mean potentiall­y higher inflation which would reduce the need to pay up for these high growth names. Whether this is true or not is unimportan­t as we know. If we zoom out, we can see that the long-term trend for these companies is still very much intact.

Relative Losers

Not much! Stocks were up and bonds were up which is what concerns most people. Looking beneath the surface, we saw some weakness from regional banks. Without getting too far off topic, investor appetite for their stocks is driven in large part by what longer-term rates are. Yesterday we saw the yield on a 10-year U.S. Treasury

note fall from 0.9% to 0.77%. As a refresher, as more people look to buy bonds, the price of bonds goes up while the yield of bonds goes down.

To relate it to an earlier point, if the market fears inflation, the desire to hold something that pays you a fixed rate with no growth potential decreases. Leading up to the election, the rate on the 10-year note climbed from 0.5% to its high of 0.9%. A reversal of these expectatio­ns would mean, at least for now, that those expectatio­ns have taken a break.

It has been an eventful couple of days in the market to say the least, however much of what you see on a daily basis is just noise. The moves that we have seen could just be the result of an “overcrowde­d” trade being unwound.

Again, it doesn’t matter why. Staying on an even keel while focusing on what really matters for your money is the key to long-term success.

David Rath, CFA is the Portfolio Strategist at Bouchey Financial Group, Ltd. with offices in Saratoga

Springs and Historic Downtown Troy. E-mail investment and financial planning questions to planningpa­ysoff@ bouchey.com. Informatio­n contained in this column should not be considered as the receipt of personaliz­ed financial advice and please consult with your financial advisor.

 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED ?? David Rath
PHOTO PROVIDED David Rath

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