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A man walks past an electronic board displaying market data at the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, in Tel Aviv, Israel November 4, 2020. REUTERS/Amir Cohen
A man walks past an electronic board displaying market data at the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, in Tel Aviv, Israel November 4, 2020. REUTERS/Amir Cohen

Singapore/New York — Heading into the US election, two potential outcomes were giving investors heartburn: a contested election, or a Joe Biden presidency with a Republican Senate.

Now, both look more likely than 24 hours ago.

President Donald Trump falsely called himself the victor and said he would ask the Supreme Court to intervene as results look too close to call in many battleground states. US stock futures swung between gains and losses, treasuries jumped and cross-asset volatility rose on renewed fears over protracted post-election wrangling.

“The key inflection point for markets will be whether the government — be it Biden- or Trump-led — is divided,” said Peter McCallum, rates strategist at Mizuho International in London. “As things stand, this is the most likely outcome, hence stocks being a little lower and the treasury curve bull flattening.”

The Senate, which had been seen by many transferring to Democratic leadership, broke towards Republicans throughout the night, while the House of Representatives is going to remain in Democratic hands.

The main worry around divided government is that markets have been hoping for a large fiscal stimulus package that will be less likely if the two parties need to work together.

“With Republicans still in charge in the Senate, we’d be surprised to see a stimulus bill early next year much in excess of $500bn, far less than the $2-trillion we expected if Democrats had won,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics in New York.

“A Democrat president with a Republican senate would likely be forced into a fiscal contraction, which is not spectacularly helpful for growth,” said Sebastien Galy, a macro strategist at Nordea Investment Funds. “A contested election will mean probabilities adjusting for weeks on end possibility.”

The even bigger worry for money managers — lack of a resolution for weeks — also doesn’t look far-fetched in the current scenario. Investors had been making bets recently on volatility declining soon after the election.

“The results are close enough to be challenged or contested,” said Elsa Lignos, global head of forex strategy at RBC Capital Markets. “The fear of a contested outcome has not really materialised in risk-off yet, but it does unfortunately seem more likely in the day ahead.”

With no “blue wave” for Democrats on Tuesday night, volatility will likely remain elevated.

“The odds have increased that the election comes down to one state now (particularly after Arizona was called for Biden by FOX), which means a still-heightened chance of litigious outcome,” said strategist Charlie McElligott of Nomura Securities International Inc.

McCallum advises buckling up for continued drama.

“We would marginally favour going long risk assets here and fading the treasury bull flattening,” McCallum said, “But clearly this will be volatile.”

Still, stock bulls can find plenty of ammo in this scenario, according to Kelvin Tay, the Asia Pacific chief investment officer for UBS Group’s wealth-management unit. He reasoned that legislative gridlock in Washington would prevent significant changes to the tax code and support corporate earnings growth.

“I would remain positive on equities because of interest rates at these levels, negative real yields and because the economy is recovering,” he said. “Equities are the right asset class to be in.”

Bloomberg

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