Investment Institute
Market Updates

U.S. election reaction: What Trump's win could mean for markets and investors

KEY POINTS
Former President Donald Trump won the U.S. election in an unexpectedly speedy return of results.
The Republican party won a majority in the Senate and looks on track to retain a majority in the House, delivering a sweep.
Trump discussed the key economic themes for a second term: migration, tariffs, fiscal easing, and deregulation.
Investors have observed that these themes were targeted last time but not delivered as much as promised.
We warn against complacency in assuming the new Trump administration will not deliver this time, although acknowledge a switch in political uncertainty to policy uncertainty.
Trump’s proposed economic measures would likely boost inflation over the coming years, and we fear slow growth in 2026.
This would reduce the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) scope for easing policy, and we forecast the Fed pausing at 4.25% next March.
Financial markets extend ‘Trump trades’ after some reversal yesterday: yields are higher, the dollar is firmer and equities appear set to post gains again today.

Former President Donald Trump has won the 2024 U.S. presidential election. In a much quicker than expected result, Trump won with 312 Electoral College votes versus 226 for his opponent Kamala Harris. 

Despite polls continually suggesting this would be the tightest race on record, the outcome has not borne this out. Trump won the popular vote, 50.3% to Harris’ with 48.1%, with the Associated Press reporting gains in the Republican vote in every state bar Washington and Utah. World leaders have congratulated Trump on his win, including Canada’s Justin Trudeau, the UK’s Keir Starmer and France’s Emmanuel Macron, as well as leaders from India, Israel, and Ukraine.

View from Chris Iggo, CIO, AXA IM Core: Trump 2.0 sends bond yields and equities higher (2016 redux)

Markets have responded as expected to Donald Trump’s victory – higher Treasury bond yields, firmer equities, and a stronger dollar, reminiscent of 2016. In 2016, 10-year Treasury yields bottomed in July and rose 50 basis points (bp) before the election. They shot up another 85bp in the month or so after the election, reaching 2.65% from 1.80% on the day of the vote. After that, they traded sideways to lower, until rising again in late 2017 to November 2018, peaking at 3.20%. On a net basis from the low below the election to the peak two years after Trump’s victory, yields rose by 180bp. 

This year, yields bottomed in September and had already risen 62bp by election day. If the pattern of 2016 is to be repeated, then we could be looking at yields continuing to increase another 100bp or so over the next year or two, giving a nominal yield of around 5.5%. However, the pattern of 2016 saw yields did not really move that much higher after the initial post-election jump. Between the end of November 2016 and November 2017, the ICE BofA US Treasury index’s total return was +2.0%. Yields actually fell for part of that period.

Again, the fundamental story would be Trump’s supposed preference for policies, which would be fiscally expansionary and inflationary, and whether they will prevent the Federal Reserve (Fed) from cutting interest rates as much as the market had hoped. Growth is arguably above trend, inflation is still above target, and so the Fed might need to keep rates on the tighter side of neutral for longer.

In 2016 to 2018, the Fed was tightening monetary policy. That helped send bond yields higher. Yields peaked in November 2018; the Fed Funds Rate peaked in December. The Fed tightened by 200bp; bond yields rose by 180bp. In 2024, the Fed is easing, and we expect more easing. That may limit the extent to which yields will rise. Also, real yields are much higher today, which also may strengthen the argument that yields will not need to rise as much. In fact, real yields are high across the curve given the decline in inflation. Any higher, and they will start to raise the likelihood of a hard landing. 

How the market eventually trades depending on several factors. First, on initial sentiment, including reflation, higher rates and equities, and a stronger dollar. Second, on actual policy decisions; we won’t know until January at the earliest what the Trump administration can actually do and whether the president will go all in on tax cuts and import tariffs. Lastly, on consumer and business behavior towards the proposed policies and how it impacts their spending, pricing behaviour and wage demands. Real yields are getting close to levels suggested by real GDP growth. There may also be a fiscal risk premium embedded in longer-term yields, and they are relatively higher by recent standards. Equities (currently expensive) have gone up in price; bonds (fair value to cheap) have gone down in price. Policy uncertainty puts risky assets more at risk.


View from David Page, Head of Macro Research, AXA IM: Trump sweep replaces political uncertainty for policy uncertainty 

The scale of victory has spilled over to Congress. As we had considered very likely, the Senate has returned a Republican majority. Joe Manchin’s empty Democrat seat in West Virginia flipped to Republican and Democrat Sherrod Brown lost in Ohio; the net gain of two seats giving Republicans an outright majority of 53-47. Republicans might pick up an extra seat or two in the remaining counts. The House of Representatives election is not as conclusive and was something that we had considered to be a closer call, although we ultimately believed that this would go with the presidential vote. At the time of writing, the Republicans have 214 seats – still short of the 218 required for a majority – but still ahead of the Democrat’s 205, with 16 votes outstanding as of this writing Moreover, Republicans already held a razor thin majority of 222 to 213 after the 2022 elections and have so far seen a net gain of one seat, suggesting that they are on track to retain the majority there. This leaves President-elect Donald Trump on track to deliver a Republican sweep, which despite recognizing significant uncertainty, has been our base case scenario since July1

Last week’s results provide a welcome clarity over the political outlook – and one that has been delivered more quickly than expected. However, uncertainty over the U.S. outlook now shifts from political uncertainty to policy uncertainty. On the campaign trail, Trump had been clear on the themes he would focus on during a second term, albeit less consistent on the detail. From an economic perspective, these have focused on tariffs, migration, fiscal easing, and deregulation. In our recent experience, investors have consoled themselves by reflecting that many of these themes are those that were entertained but not delivered – at least not to the extent promised – during his first term and assume similar for a second term. We fear this is complacent. Much frustration with Trump’s first term reflected his inexperience with the machinery of state. The thrust of Project 2025 and other preparations has been to make his second term much more effective at delivering on policy promises. We question whether Trump will truly deliver a 10% blanket global tariff and 60% tariff on China; whether he will deport the eight million-plus undocumented migrants in the U.S.; and doubt that the Republican administration will deliver the full extent of fiscal easing trailed by Trump. But we believe that he will come out of the stalls moving in all these directions in 2025, with marked implications for the U.S. economic outlook.

While we assume many of these policies will take time to implement, we expect to see some tariff increases, restricted migrant flows, and moves towards a fiscal easing package across the course of 2025. We will publish our full 2025 and 2026 forecasts in our economic outlook in December. However, we consider tariffs and migration restriction to be supply shocks and fiscal easing to be a demand boost. This is likely to see U.S. inflation reaccelerate – perhaps sharply depending on the scale and pace of tariffs. 

In terms of growth, depending on financial market reaction, in our opinion U.S. activity will remain solid into 2025 – softening from a robust 2.8% expected for 2024, but likely remaining above trend at 2.3% for 2025. However, assuming broad implementation of Trump’s policies across 2026, we expect to see material headwinds to growth in 2026. We believe that rising inflation will restrict the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) space for policy easing. In growing anticipation of a Trump win (and in the light of firmer data) markets had scaled back expectations for Fed cuts to take the benchmark rate to 4.00% by end-2025 from 3.00% after the Fed’s surprise 50 basis point cut in September. Indeed, while we expect the Fed to proceed with 0.25% cuts in the next successive meetings (November and December) to 4.50%, we then only pencil in one more rate cut in March to 4.25%. However, we do see the risk of a marked slowdown in growth seeing the Fed resume cuts again in 2026. 

Above and beyond these economic measures, we also are wary of some of geopolitical dynamics impacting financial market and economic outlooks. Trump has repeatedly said that he could settle the Russia-Ukraine conflict in his first day. We fear that this risks forcing a settlement on Ukraine by removing military support. This could have implications for European security developments over the rest of this decade, and impact European defense spending and public finances. 

Moreover, regardless of the scale of measures, it appears clear that Trump will increase trade tensions with China again, impacting their already fragile economic outlook. The Chinese authorities are concurrently holding policy meetings with a view to targeting and announcing a new range of stimulus measures, in part accounting for the new direction of U.S. policy. But this may further stretch geopolitical tensions, which had improved somewhat in recent years. Finally, the Middle East is in a delicate balance for now. Geopolitical tensions have been in an uneasy equilibrium over recent years, and Trump’s statements suggest that he could significantly change this balance. We do not know where the geopolitical equilibrium would settle after this but consider associated risks to financial market sentiment. 

Several of these developments appear to be playing through financial markets – and indeed had underpinned a broad move towards “Trump trades” over the last few weeks. While short-term interest rate expectations were little changed, expectations for the Fed’s rate by next September had risen over the last two weeks, and are up 11bp from Tuesday morning, consistent with concerns surrounding the Fed’s space to ease. Overnight, two-year Treasury yields rose by 8bp to 4.26%. 10- year yields posted a larger 17bp rise to 4.44%, also reflecting a rise in longer-term inflation expectations and possibly considering longer-term fiscal sustainability concerns. The dollar also gained - having softened by 0.5% against a basket of currencies on Tuesday, the dollar gained by 1.5% overnight to a four-month high – likely anticipating firmer rate differentials and an impact from tariffs. Finally, following a 1.2% gain on Tuesday, S&P futures point to further gains today – as markets plausibly anticipate gain from deregulation.

Source for all data: Bloomberg, as of 6 November 2024

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