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Our S&P targets and sector strategy assume a balanced outcome from the US general election on Nov 8th
that maintains the current split in power. However, if Democrats keep the Presidency and take Senate or
Republicans take the Presidency and keep Senate, it likely brings policy uncertainty and market volatility.
Longer-term, it will be the policies and implementation that will influence markets, which both parties, many
individuals and circumstances will craft. This note identifies sectors, industries and stocks that we think would
be price sensitive to an unbalanced election outcome tilted toward one party.
Dividing issues: Taxes, trade, favored infrastructure types and monetary policy
It’s difficult to pin down specific policies from either candidate, but on several economic issues their general
bias is clear. These issues include taxes, trade deals, favored types of infrastructure — such as green vs
conventional energy, preference for monetary policy, and also their expressed views on industries such as
Health Care and Energy. It is the gist of the candidate’s preference on these issues that we used to identify
sectors and stocks sensitive to a sweep.
Big banks might outperform small banks and oil might go down on Rep sweep
While many of our conclusions align with conventional judgment, we think we differ in that we think a Rep
sweep could: 1) be good for some domestic oil producers, as it should permit more drilling, but negative to the
recovery in oil and gas prices, as more supply, and thus negative for the broad Energy sector, 2) bring
somewhat faster Fed hikes and a stronger dollar than otherwise, 3) the first two could lead to lower inflation
and a flatter yield curve than otherwise would be. One could argue that Trump sized tax cuts and an
infrastructure and defense spending spree would steepen the curve, but we think this unlikely while
Republicans control the House. If Fed hikes bring yield curve flattening then big banks and capital markets
likely outperform small banks and insurance companies. Slow hikes that allow inflation to accelerate and
steepen the curve might favor smaller banks and insurance, but this could pressure PEs at non-financials. If
the Fed falls too far behind the curve, higher long-term rates could threaten the stock market, real estate and
the overall economy.
Equity strategy election themes: Party sweep better for investor confidence on
Taxes-R, Trade-D, Infrastructure-R/D, Faster Fed hikes-R, Higher inflation target-D, Steeper curve-D, stronger
dollar-R, stock market-R/D, large caps-R, small caps-D, globally exposed S&P stocks-R, domestically exposed
S&P-D, higher commodity prices-D, lighter regulations-R, foreign profit repatriation-R.
Industry pair trades and ETF ideas for Democratic vs. Republican Sweep
1) Favor Health Care Services & Facilities over Drugs & Medical Devices
2) Favor Engineering & Construction over Defense stocks
3) Favor Small Banks & Life Insurance over Big Banks and Capital Mkts
4) Favor Energy majors over Oil Services and smaller domestic E&Ps
5) Favor Clean Energy & Social Media over Cheap Energy & Telco/Cable
6) Favor Metals & Mining over Chemicals & Construction Materials
Dem: IHF, GEX, XME, SOCL, IWM, KBE. Rep: XPH, IHI, XOP, IGF, ITA, IYZ, VGT, XLF
Clinton 15 stock basket (DBUSCLNT): UNH, HUM, MCk, ACM, PWR, XOM, AA, NEE, CREE, FSLR, FB,
NFLX, PRU, C, UNP
Trump 15 stock basket (DBUSTRMP): JNJ, PFE, MDT, NOC, LLL, HAL, DOW, DUK, F, MLM, VZ, CMCSA,
SCHW, WFC, DAL
David Bianco
JuWang +1
Winnie Nip
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https://gm.db.com/welcome.html?/ger/analyst/Analyst.eqsr?analystID=39531
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