Investors are waking up to a possible Biden victory in US presidential election

Democratic US presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden speaks about the Trump administration’s handling of the coronavirus during a campaign event in Wilmington, Delaware.

NEW YORK: Investors are increasingly preparing for market volatility ahead of the US presidential election, with some shifting stock positions and selling the dollar, as Democratic contender Joe Biden maintains a lead against President Donald Trump in opinion polls.

Plenty can change in the four months before the Nov 3 vote, and many investors remain focused on whether a resurgence of the coronavirus will damage a nascent US economic rebound.

Some money managers, however, are already preparing for the possibility of a Biden victory by betting against the dollar and cutting their positions in US stocks.

“The president’s poll numbers have fallen off a cliff,” said Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Hermes. “The market is looking at this and saying, ‘If the election were held today Biden would win.’”

The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll showed Biden leading Trump by 8 percentage points among registered voters. Approval of Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic has plummeted.

A Biden victory – as well as a possible Democratic sweep of the House and Senate – could threaten policies championed by Trump and generally favored by Wall Street, including lower corporate tax rates and fewer regulations, analysts said.

Despite the sharp coronavirus-fuelled dip, the S&P 500 is up about 37 per cent since Trump took office. The index gained 85 per cent and 79 per cent during the first terms of Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, respectively.

Under Biden, the corporate tax rate is likely to increase to 28 per cent, reversing half of the cut enacted by Trump and the Republican-led Congress in late 2017, according to Amundi Pioneer Asset Management.

That could reduce S&P 500 earnings by roughly US$20 per share, driving investors out of US stocks and hurting the dollar, said Paresh Upadhyaya, portfolio manager at the firm who is betting against the greenback.

Arthur Laffer Jr., portfolio manager at Laffer Tengler Investments, unwound his dollar position last week, believing a Biden victory could lead to slower growth and pressure on the U.S. currency. Laffer Jr’s father has advised Trump on economic issues.

Net bets against the US currency in futures markets recently hit a two-year high.

Potential new regulation from a Democratic administration could be a headwind for energy and financial stocks, analysts at UBS Global Wealth Management said in a note to investors.

The BlackRock Investment Institute recently cut its ratings on US equities to neutral on concerns of fading fiscal stimulus and election uncertainty.

“The two parties are as far apart on policy as they have ever been, making the result consequential for markets,” BlackRock’s analysts said in a note.

Orlando of Federated Hermes has raised his cash allocation as coronavirus cases have grown and Trump’s poll numbers sagged. He plans to reduce positions in dividend-paying stocks if Trump’s slide in the polls continues on concerns about increased taxes on dividends and capital gains.

Plenty of investors remain unconvinced that a Biden victory or Democratic sweep would bode ill for stocks, especially as the Federal Reserve is expected to backstop the US economy if needed.

“As long as (stimulus) stays constant … you will continue to have some ballast in terms of asset prices,” said Sam Hendel, president at Levin Easterly Partners.

Some investors are also wary of putting too much faith in polls, after many failed to predict the UK’s decision to exit the European Union in 2016 and Trump’s election victory that year.

Traders in the options market are betting on a surge in volatility around the election. The S&P options market is implying an election-related move of 5-5.5 per cent compared to an average absolute one-day move of 2.92 per cent in the past three elections, according to Christopher Murphy, co-head of derivatives at Susquehanna Financial Group.

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