New York Post

‘SMART’ MONEY?

Don’t trust banking behemoths’ elex predix

- CHARLES GASPARINO

WITH Joe Biden up in the polls, pre-election positions should be easy. Load up the truck on shares of any company that can benefit from his embrace of the Green New Deal, like solar-panel companies. Sell Treasuries because Biden’s spending plan looks like President Trump’s — only on steroids.

Also, buy stocks. If you think Trump was good for the markets over the past four years, Biden’s planned $2 trillion spending spree as he gets into office will turbocharg­e markets like never before, the Wall Street experts say.

And yet look closely, and solarcompa­ny stocks have risen over the past year but they aren’t shooting to the moon. Yields onTreasury bonds aren’t spiking wildly. And the stock market appears to be in a panic.

There are a couple of reasons for this. Some traders say investors are finally pricing in all those new taxes Biden is planning, or that Biden’s poll numbers in battlegrou­nd states are shakier than the consensus indicates. Or maybe Trump will come close enough to contest the election, sending stocks into a tizzy of uncertaint­y for weeks after Election Day.

The confusion of the smartmoney crowd tells us something about Wall Street. Thegeniuse­s who run the big banks and financial firms and too often dominate economic commentary have never been that smart, and probably shouldn’t be trusted to either predict the election or how good (or bad) things will get whoever is elected.

One reason I know this: The behind-the-scenes confusion I’m witnessing among major traders. Wall Street cares a lot about the presidenti­al election and not just because it impacts their tax bills. They trade on the impact the likely winner will have on stocks, which is exactly what they’re doing now, feverishly, as we get close to Tuesday.

Several top players in the business over the past few days have called me, of all people, for a read on the presidenti­al polls because they’re trading blindly on this one.

“My clients are mostly split,” said one adviser to major hedge funds. “About 60 percent of them think it’s Biden’s to lose, but the rest say they’re betting on Trump.”

The other reason to always suspect Wall Street wisdom is its lousy track record. Moody Investors Service recently made some news predicting that a Biden victory would be great for the economy.

Forget about his tax increases, new regulation­s, likely fracking bans, or having a socialist like AOC giving Biden tips on the economy. The smart dudes at Moody’s said Biden’s big spending plans would cancel any negative impact of his tax hikes.

But since when is a government­controlled economy more efficient than the one we have now, where pre-COVID unemployme­nt was at record low levels, and workingcla­ss people started seeing wage increases for the first time in years?

Another question: When was the last time Moody’s gave investors fair warning to any major financial event? The 2008 banking crisis? Nope. The dot-com bubble bursting in 2000? Nope.

Go back in history and you’ll see that for every one Moody’s gets right, they get a lot more wrong.

I don’t want to pick on Moody’s because it’s an easy target. The mighty Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs (another Biden-economy booster) is less obvious but just as qualified for an award. Recall: Its former CEO touted the end of the 2008 financial crisis before it really began, leading to Goldman needing a government bailout to survive.

The point is when you see leftleanin­g TV pundits praising Moody’s for its Biden analysis, remember it’s mostly devoid of context. And based on its record (and settlement­s totaling almost $7billion for its role in the 1MDB scandal), Goldman should probably stick to bankingand­stopmaking­prediction­s that can sway a presidenti­al election.

 ??  ?? Given Wall Street giants’ mediocre track record predicting post-election market moves, it’s better to take prognostic­ations of a Biden boom after the latest swoon with a grain of salt.
Given Wall Street giants’ mediocre track record predicting post-election market moves, it’s better to take prognostic­ations of a Biden boom after the latest swoon with a grain of salt.
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