Hillary Best Candidate for Stock Market
Selasa, 18 Oktober 2016 - 08:43 WIB
Hillary Best Candidate for Stock Market
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NEW YORK - Recently, investors saying loudly and clearly: We want Hillary Clinton to win. And the probably nearly all the "market metrics" point to a Clinton victory.
Investors are no longer gobbling up gold, which usually happens when they are worried. The price has fallen 4 percent in October alone, as Donald Trump's poll numbers have tanked.
Similarly, the Mexican peso jumped sharply after the release of the Access Hollywood tape of Trump's vulgar comments about women on October 7. The peso has stayed elevated ever since, a bad sign for Trump.
But the biggest indication of just how much sentiment has shifted in favor of Clinton comes from investor polling data.
Sixty percent of investors now say Clinton is the best candidate for the stock market, according to a new ETrade poll of nearly 1,000 active investors versus only 40 percent for Trump.
The survey was conducted October 1 through October 10. It's a sharp bounce from the second quarter when E*Trade found only 28 percent of investors believed Clinton would be best for stocks -- barely ahead of Trump's 25 percent at the time.
Gold is now trading below $1,300 an ounce for the first time since June. The yellow metal has been sinking ever since the first US presidential debate in late September. It's down 4 percent so far in October.
There are several factors that could be driving gold down. Key among them is that investors aren't as worried anymore about a surprise Trump win along the lines of what happened with Brexit.
Moody's Analytics has a special model to predict who will end up in the White House based on how the economy is doing. It has correctly predicted the winner every election since 1980.
![Hillary Best Candidate for Stock Market]()
This year, the model points to a solid Clinton win because of a relatively healthy economy. Only two factors could change the model enough to point to a Trump victory: if gas prices spike above $3 a gallon, or President Obama's approval rating falls substantially. Neither seems likely to happen. (The US average gas price is sitting at $2.24 a gallon, according to the AAA fuel gauge)
Investors seem to be happier with the state of the economy too. Today, 45 percent of investors give the US economy the top "A" or "B" grades, up a lot from only 32 percent of investors in the second quarter, according to the ETrade survey of active investors.
It might sound odd to look at Mexico's currency for clues on who will win the US presidency, but the Mexican peso has become a new proxy for the Clinton v. Trump matchup. At the moment, it's signaling a Clinton victory.
Why? It all comes down to Trump's comments on Mexico. He wants to build a wall between the US and Mexico (that he wants Mexico to pay for), renegotiate NAFTA and come down hard on U.S. companies that move factories, and supposedly jobs, south of the border.
So every time investors think Trump's chances of winning improve, the Mexican peso falls. And when Wall Street believes Trump doesn't have much of a shot at the White House, the Mexican peso rises.
The Mexican peso jumped the weekend that the "Access Hollywood" tape came out and the second presidential debate. It has stayed at that higher level ever since then. Poll after poll now shows Clinton with a solid lead nationally.
There's just one market metric pointing to Trump: the S&P 500 test developed by Sam Stovall, a market expert at CFRA Research.
How the broader market performs between August 1 and October 31 has been an incredibly reliable predictor of who ends up in the White House. If the S&P 500 (the broadest U.S. stock market gauge) goes up in that critical three month period, Clinton to win. If it falls, expect a Donald Trump victory.
Right now, the stock market is signaling a Trump win. The S&P 500 is about 2 percent below where it was on August 1.
"I remind investors that these type of studies should be viewed as a guide and never gospel," Stovall told CNNMoney.
Of course, politics is hardly the only factor driving the stock market. There's a lot more attention on the Federal Reserve's possible December rate hike and the deluge of corporate earnings. If anything, the political factor influencing the broader market is concern that Clinton will win AND the U.S. Senate or House could go to the Democrats. Investors prefer divided government, which leads to fewer changes in laws.
Investors are no longer gobbling up gold, which usually happens when they are worried. The price has fallen 4 percent in October alone, as Donald Trump's poll numbers have tanked.
Similarly, the Mexican peso jumped sharply after the release of the Access Hollywood tape of Trump's vulgar comments about women on October 7. The peso has stayed elevated ever since, a bad sign for Trump.
But the biggest indication of just how much sentiment has shifted in favor of Clinton comes from investor polling data.
Sixty percent of investors now say Clinton is the best candidate for the stock market, according to a new ETrade poll of nearly 1,000 active investors versus only 40 percent for Trump.
The survey was conducted October 1 through October 10. It's a sharp bounce from the second quarter when E*Trade found only 28 percent of investors believed Clinton would be best for stocks -- barely ahead of Trump's 25 percent at the time.
Gold is now trading below $1,300 an ounce for the first time since June. The yellow metal has been sinking ever since the first US presidential debate in late September. It's down 4 percent so far in October.
There are several factors that could be driving gold down. Key among them is that investors aren't as worried anymore about a surprise Trump win along the lines of what happened with Brexit.
Moody's Analytics has a special model to predict who will end up in the White House based on how the economy is doing. It has correctly predicted the winner every election since 1980.

This year, the model points to a solid Clinton win because of a relatively healthy economy. Only two factors could change the model enough to point to a Trump victory: if gas prices spike above $3 a gallon, or President Obama's approval rating falls substantially. Neither seems likely to happen. (The US average gas price is sitting at $2.24 a gallon, according to the AAA fuel gauge)
Investors seem to be happier with the state of the economy too. Today, 45 percent of investors give the US economy the top "A" or "B" grades, up a lot from only 32 percent of investors in the second quarter, according to the ETrade survey of active investors.
It might sound odd to look at Mexico's currency for clues on who will win the US presidency, but the Mexican peso has become a new proxy for the Clinton v. Trump matchup. At the moment, it's signaling a Clinton victory.
Why? It all comes down to Trump's comments on Mexico. He wants to build a wall between the US and Mexico (that he wants Mexico to pay for), renegotiate NAFTA and come down hard on U.S. companies that move factories, and supposedly jobs, south of the border.
So every time investors think Trump's chances of winning improve, the Mexican peso falls. And when Wall Street believes Trump doesn't have much of a shot at the White House, the Mexican peso rises.
The Mexican peso jumped the weekend that the "Access Hollywood" tape came out and the second presidential debate. It has stayed at that higher level ever since then. Poll after poll now shows Clinton with a solid lead nationally.
There's just one market metric pointing to Trump: the S&P 500 test developed by Sam Stovall, a market expert at CFRA Research.
How the broader market performs between August 1 and October 31 has been an incredibly reliable predictor of who ends up in the White House. If the S&P 500 (the broadest U.S. stock market gauge) goes up in that critical three month period, Clinton to win. If it falls, expect a Donald Trump victory.
Right now, the stock market is signaling a Trump win. The S&P 500 is about 2 percent below where it was on August 1.
"I remind investors that these type of studies should be viewed as a guide and never gospel," Stovall told CNNMoney.
Of course, politics is hardly the only factor driving the stock market. There's a lot more attention on the Federal Reserve's possible December rate hike and the deluge of corporate earnings. If anything, the political factor influencing the broader market is concern that Clinton will win AND the U.S. Senate or House could go to the Democrats. Investors prefer divided government, which leads to fewer changes in laws.
(rnz)