Mike
Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Both Elections & Investments
Seldom What They Seem
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018,
Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
Gilbert & Sullivan nailed it when they titled one of
their songs in H.M.S. Pinafore “Things are Seldom What they Seem”. This title
should be attached to every article that discusses the investment implications
of the next election and future elections. Currently, almost all the chatter is
about the Presidential election, which also gets exclusive attention overseas.
This is naive in the extreme for the following reasons:
- Whoever is going to be sitting in the Oval Office will not likely be there for another term. Thus, they will likely have limited political power on Capitol Hill.
- The House must start all tax and spending bills and both parties are split along ideological lines.
- The Senate, with 6-year staggered terms, requires critical legislation to be passed by 60 votes. They wish to terminate the filibuster rule. Politically, the senate is even more divided than the house. Additionally, a number of senators are interested in having a seat in the White House and they typically have larger financial estates than members of the House.
- Both political parties believe Washington should dictate what Americans purchase by using grants and tariffs. (Democrats favor “EVs” and labor union produced voters, while Republicans seem to favor tariffs. Our economic history shows that countries supporting consumer choice grow faster and sounder.)
- With deep divisions on Capitol Hill and changing legislative leadership, including the chairs of committees on the Republican side, it is going to be difficult to get bills passed.
- The role of the Supreme Court will be critical. The present Court believes it is responsible for determining when cases comply with the written Constitution. This Court decided that a prior court decision on Roe vs. Wade was unauthorized. The issue was not about abortion, but whether the “Warren Court” 50 years ago sanctioned abortion under the Constitution. The Founding Fathers limited the powers of the Federal government to those items specifically enumerated in the Constitution, leaving all other decisions to the individual states.
Possible Peak Two Fridays Past
Some investors are more focused on their long-term
investment responsibilities than political decisions. However, too many
economists have become mathematicians and too many political scientists have
become statisticians.
Some of the signs that all is not well:
- AAII’s weekly sample survey of investor sentiment changed dramatically. Two weeks ago, there was 20 percentage point advantage in favor of the bulls for the next 6 months. In the most current week, this position shrank 7% points.
- The weekly share volume on the NYSE declined 42,209 shares, while NASDAQ volume rose 3,034,261 shares. (Considering prices fell during this period, the increase in volume is bearish.)
- Standard & Poor’s tracks 32 indices weekly and only 1 rose last week, by only 0.05%.
- The underwriting of speculative bonds rose sharply in late September and thus far in October. The sharp increase in underwriting was well beyond the need to refinance existing debt. This suggests savvy speculative bond issuers see higher rates ahead when they need to sell more debt.
Question: How do you see interest rates in late 2025, 2026,
and 2028?
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
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Lipper's Blog: Mis-Interpreting News - Weekly Blog # 857
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