https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/a-trump-win-could-cost-investors-1-3-trillion-213513356.html
 
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/a-trump-win-could-cost-investors-1-3-trillion-213513356.html

 A Trump win could cost investors $1.3 trillion
 Rick Newman 6 hours ago  Comments 
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/a-trump-win-could-cost-investors-1-3-trillion-213513356.html#
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 Donald Trump thinks he’ll make America great again. But before that happens, 
investors may have to absorb a gut punch.
 Macroeconomic Advisers, a St. Louis forecasting firm, recently analyzed the 
impact of a Donald Trump versus a Hillary Clinton win in November on the 
overall stock market. There was a stark difference. A Clinton win, the firm 
says, would produce a 4% rally in the stock market. But a Trump victory would 
send stocks sliding by a steep 7%.
 The market capitalization of the S&P 500 is about $18.6 trillion, so a 7% drop 
would slash about $1.3 trillion off the value of companies in the index. If you 
include the 4% gain investors might otherwise book from a Clinton win, the 
total cost of a Trump win would be more than $2 trillion.
 Trump supporters will undoubtedly argue with the assumptions and methodology 
that produce such a forecast, and predicting the direction of the stock market 
is, of course, risky business. But the Macro Advisers forecast for stocks 
mirrors other analysis of the Trump economic plan. Moody’s Analytics, for 
instance, predicted it would kill 7 million jobs and cause a recession 
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/trump-economic-plan-cause-recession-000000449.html.
 Another analysis, by Oxford Economics 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/09/16/what-a-donald-trump-presidency-would-do-to-the-global-economy/,
 found the impact of Trump’s plan less severe, but still said it would induce a 
slowdown.
 Macro Advisers used recent data to gauge market reaction to the rising and 
falling probability of a Trump victory and predict what might happen if he 
actually wins. It started with the regularly updated electoral odds calculated 
by the website 538 
http://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2016-election-forecast/?ex_cid=rrpromo#plus,
 which currently gives Trump a 28.4% chance of winning. Macro Advisers then 
drew on its own data showing the market-determined equity risk premium, which 
shows the extra return investors demand in order to hold stocks, which can be 
volatile and lose value quickly.
 The firm says there has been a statistically significant correlation in the 
two variables, meaning that the equity risk premium has risen when the odds of 
Trump winning appear to go up and fallen when the odds fall. In plain English, 
investors become more fearful of stocks losing value should Trump win and more 
confident of stocks gaining value if Clinton wins. That led to the predictions 
of a 7% plunge if Trump wins and a 4% gain for Clinton.
 Economists and investors worry most about three planks of Trump’s economic 
plan: threats to tear up free-trade deals and impose new tariffs on importers 
such as China and Mexico; a large tax cut that would add trillions to the 
national debt; and new restrictions on immigration that would stunt growth in 
the labor force. All would be likely to cut into corporate earnings, at least 
in the short term, triggering a selloff in stocks.
 Businesses also worry about Trump’s criticism of Federal Reserve chair Janet 
Yellen and his promise to replace her, which would shake up the one institution 
most able to calm jittery markets. If a President Trump were to attack the 
Fed—especially during a market selloff—it would be the market equivalent of 
blocking firefighters from a fire.
 On the other hand, markets might decide Trump isn’t so bad after all, 
especially since he wants to kill regulations that have been on the books for 
decades and let thousands of small- and medium-sized businesses keep more of 
their income. Bargain-hunters might even start to buy stocks on November 9, as 
their frightened competitors sell. This year’s election might not be good for 
business, but it’s certainly keeping gamblers attentive.
 Rick Newman is the author of four books, including Rebounders: How Winners 
Pivot from Setback to Success http://rickjnewman.com/rebounders/. Follow him on 
Twitter: @rickjnewman https://twitter.com/#%21/rickjnewman.



 

 

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