Fade the Election

Citizens freely expressing political opinions is the most prized aspect of a functioning democracy. That freedom will certainly be on full display as we head toward the hotly contested Presidential election.

RBA has always been highly dispassionate regarding politics when building portfolios, and that unemotional approach might be even more important in the current stormy political environment.

History suggests Presidential elections are not nearly as important to the financial markets as the media plays them up to be, and a focus on fundamentals rather than political slogans has generally been beneficial. Historical asset class and sector performance shows virtually no consistent performance pattern under Democratic or Republican Presidents. In fact, performance is sometimes totally counter to what was expected.

The market doesn’t crash when the other side wins

The losing side in every Presidential election seems to predict the financial markets will be doomed. Yet, history shows that investors reaped double-digit annualized returns under every President except one in the last 45 years.

Table 1 shows S&P 500® annualized returns by Presidential time in office for each of the last eight Presidents. The S&P 500® had a negative compounded return only during Bush 43’s time in office, which was called the “Lost Decade in Equities”.

The S&P 500® tended to have meaningful positive returns regardless of a President’s political party.

table 1