U.S. Stocks And Dollar Affected By Election; Bonds Volatile

 | Nov 08, 2016 01:13AM ET

I licensed this coin flip photo late last week thinking that it would be reflective of how tight the Presidential race had become. Between the New York Times stories on the Clinton Foundation, the 50,000 emails from John Podesta and the FBI re-opening of the Hillary email investigation, last week’s polls confirmed that the race for our next POTUS was going down to the final days.

But as the weekend progressed, we received registration data on the early voters in the key swing states, followed by the FBI ending its re-opened email investigation and it looked as if Hillary would cross 269 electoral votes first on Tuesday. Then on Sunday night, the election-betting markets, the Mexican peso and the global equity markets began to reflect the rebound in Hillary’s chances.

While I may no longer be able to use the coin flip photo for the Presidential race, I can now at least use it for control of the U.S. Senate. Several key races have tightened in the last week giving nearly even odds to which party will control the Senate. If the GOP can hang on, then gridlock will be guaranteed for the next two years and only the best ideas, policies and Supreme Court nominations will make it through the D.C. gauntlet. Political horse trading at its finest would please the global financial markets. There is certainty to gridlock. And the markets like nothing more than certainty.

If you want to stay up and watch the election results on Tuesday night, a shortcut for you will be to follow the Florida results. With 29 electoral votes needed to win the state, there are not enough other close leaning states for Trump to grab to cross the 269 threshold if he doesn’t win Florida.

Good luck to all the candidates running and congratulations to all the voters for making it through this 2016 election cycle. Only 1,456 days until the next Presidential election.

As we noted Friday afternoon, market uncertainty has clearly affected the markets since the slide in Hillary’s poll numbers…

U.S. Stocks and the dollar have been most directly affected, while Bonds have been volatile. Crude Oil seems to have its own problems with the internals at OPEC, but some of its slide will also be a result of Trump’s negative attitude towards global trade and the Middle East.