Baltimore Sun

Investors await outcome of midterms

Different scenarios create different winners, losers

- By Alex Veiga

LOS ANGELES — The midterm elections are certain to have implicatio­ns for Wall Street, regardless of how they shape the balance of power in Congress.

That’s because in every scenario there could be winners and losers in key sectors of the market, including banking, pharmaceut­icals, companies that would benefit from government infrastruc­ture projects and those that rely on healthy consumer spending, analysts say.

The scenario deemed most likely by recent polls and analyst projection­s has Democrats regaining control of the House and Republican­s keeping control of the Senate. The odds are longer for Republican­s or Democrats emerging with “Gridlock is a good thing for markets because markets like certainty,” said analyst Terry Haines. majorities in both chambers.

“Divided government equals gridlock,” said Terry Haines, head of U.S. policy and political analysis at Evercore ISI. “Gridlock is a good thing for markets because markets like certainty.”

Here’s a look at how the market might react to the different scenarios:

In the scenario where Democrats regain control of the House, major policy initiative­s from the White House will be dead on arrival. Compromise could be difficult, especially if the Democrats move to impeach President Donald Trump.

But Democrats might find common ground with the GOP in some areas. Agreement on an infrastruc­ture bill could give a boost to constructi­on equipment and transporta­tion companies. And legislatio­n to control drug pricing would likely be a drag on pharmaceut­ical company stocks.

A Democratic-led House could also lead to heightened oversight and investigat­ions of big banks and Wall Street firms, which could weigh on financial sector stocks.

The possibilit­y of a government shutdown also increases with a divided Congress, according to a report from UBS on the potential impact of the midterm elections. That could unnerve investors. The S&P 500 slumped nearly 20 percent during the government shutdown that occurred during Congress’ 2011 debt ceiling impasse. The odds of the Democrats taking both houses of Congress have diminished of late, possibly to the relief of Wall Street.

In this scenario, Democrats could push to shore up the Affordable Care Act, but any move to reverse the Trump administra­tion’s hefty tax cut on corporatio­ns or its steady rollback of government regulation­s on businesses could be fruitless in the face of Trump’s veto.

“With this in mind, this election is really about how dysfunctio­nal Washington will be for the second half of President Trump’s first term,” Mike Ryan, chief investment officer, Americas, for UBS Global Wealth Management, noted in the company’s report.

Should Republican­s remain in control of Congress, it’s likely the Trump administra­tion will try to make the personal tax cuts included in last year’s reform package per- manent. Also, on the possible to-do list: cutting entitlemen­ts, more easing of government regulation­s on banks and other businesses and perhaps tackling the issue of drug price controls, according to the UBS report.

If the GOP extends its majority, there also could be a push to lower capital gains taxes and enact an infrastruc­ture spending bill.

The midterms add to the uncertaint­y that has buffeted the market for the past month.

After a solid third quarter that saw records for the S&P 500 and Dow Jones industrial­s, stocks have swooned on fears that rising interest rates and the U.S. trade dispute with China could undo some of the benefits of the GOP tax cuts and eventually squeeze corporate profit margins. October snapped a six-month winning streak for the S&P 500, giving the benchmark index its worst monthly loss in seven years.

 ?? VICTOR J. BLUE/BLOOMBERG NEWS ??
VICTOR J. BLUE/BLOOMBERG NEWS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States