U.S. Government Shutdown Isn't What Stocks Care About

 | Jan 15, 2018 12:55AM ET

It’s getting awfully difficult to remember the last time the US government was NOT on the brink of a shutdown, but the most recent deadline for “disaster,” this coming Friday, January 19, is fast approaching. The last threat, near the end of December, was once again avoided when Congress stepped in to kick the can down the road with an agreement on short-term funding. For the upcoming “deadline,” politicians on both sides of the aisle are threatening to play hardball.

The truth is that the mid-December Democrat victory in Alabama—with Doug Jones wresting the Senate seat from the Republican Party—trimmed the latter’s majority in the Senate to just 51 versus 49. Given the need for 60 votes, Republicans will have to do something to entice nine Democrats to back any legislation and avoid a shutdown. Yet right now, with the necessary spending bill tied to ongoing negotiations regarding immigration legislation, coupled with President Trump's recent, unfortunate remarks about countries from which he finds immigration undesirable, it appears the probably of convincing any Democrat to vote with the GOP is unlikely. And that means that the probability of a government shutdown this time has likely increased. Should investors be concerned about market exuberance collapsing as a result?

Although “government shutdown” sounds a lot like some type of end-all apocalyptic disaster, history shows us that it may not be as dire as financial media tends to portray it. As we mentioned when we took a look at the issue back in September of last year (see chart below), government shutdowns have occurred on 18 occasions in the past and resulted in negative returns for the S&P 500 on only half of those occasions with an overall average drop of just 0.6% in the S&P 500, according to data from LPL Research. In fact, the last instance was in 2013 and the benchmark index actually chalked up a 3.1% gain.