USA TODAY International Edition

You can shift 401( k) for Biden era

Look for global changes, increase in spending

- Nancy Tengler Nancy Tengler is chief investment officer at Laffer Tengler Investment­s and the author of “The Women’s Guide to Successful Investing.”

You have heard it said that elections have consequenc­es. They do, but, savvy investors find ways to make money no matter the result.

Four years ago, voters supported a red sweep, handing both houses of Congress and the presidency to Republican­s. Suddenly, energy stocks moved out of the regulatory cross hairs and the U. S. became energy independen­t. Yet it didn't help the stock performanc­e of most energy companies.

Now, energy regulation­s already have been tightened as the result of a blue sweep of Congress and the election of Joe Biden to the presidency. Since then, green energy companies have been on a tear. The market giveth and the market taketh away!

Changes to policy regularly affect stock valuations. After the Great Financial Crisis, bank regulation­s were tightened, and financial stocks subsequent­ly returned less than half of the return for the S& P 500. The regulation­s enforced by the Federal Reserve after a near meltdown in the financial system were put in place for all the right reasons, but they had a profound impact on the performanc­e of those stocks. Elections swing the pendulum. Take note.

Diversification obviously helps mitigate the swings but we can make marginal adjustment­s to our 401( k) allocation­s to reflect a changing climate and improve our overall performanc­e. Consider where the opportunit­ies might surface and head in that direction.

Look abroad

Just about every year, strategist­s recommend a move to internatio­nal stocks. We are told they’re cheap compared with U. S companies. Regression to the mean – that tried- and- true investment tenet that can take years, even decades, to realize – is provided as another reason global stocks should outperform U. S. stocks.

I have a better reason: When the vaccine is fully implemente­d and economies around the globe reopen economic growth will see a snapback and global synchroniz­ed growth is likely to return. Add to that a weaker dollar ( which is good for emerging markets) and global stocks should benefit.

Target firms gaining from China truce

The Biden administra­tion is likely to strike a softer tone in our trade relationsh­ip with China. Early indication­s are that the U. S. will collaborat­e with our allies to develop a cohesive and coordinate­d approach to working with Beijing. This may benefit technology and consumer discretion­ary stocks with significant sales in China.

Leverage consumer spending surge

With Stimulus Check 2.0 on the way and another check likely to come in the spring, Americans have been saving at a historic rate. Some of this money was spent in the summer and spring but savings are still about $ 2 trillion dollars above pre- COVID levels. Investors like to refer to this as pent- up demand. Consumer discretion­ary stocks have benefited from the summer spend and are likely to continue to do so as consumers reduce savings and get back to work in 2021.

Growth or value?

Value has enjoyed recent outperform­ance after years of underperfo­rmance relative to growth. The jury is still out as to whether value will continue to outperform. Consequent­ly, you should create a balance in your U. S. equity allocation based on your risk tolerance and years to retirement. If you are young you may want to overweight growth to value. Regardless, you don’t have to be allin or all- out of either group to achieve your investment goals. Establish a comfortabl­e allocation to each style category and adjust it when weightings materially differ from your allocation.

Investing is about being mostly right. Monitor your allocation­s – quarterly reviews are more than adequate – and don’t be afraid to make adjustment­s. Because two years from now we are likely to have a new mix shift in Washington, D. C., and a new set of opportunit­ies to make money in the market.

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