Einblicke
Will Trump 2.0 Be as Good for the Markets as Trump 1.0?
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Global Multi Asset Thought of the Week
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Dezember 09, 2024
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Dezember 09, 2024
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Will Trump 2.0 Be as Good for the Markets as Trump 1.0? |
Bottom Line
Markets are bullish on Trump’s second term, hoping for tax cuts and better growth. We expect no net stimulus and a decent size hit from tariffs and immigration. This should be bullish for bonds as the Fed continues cutting, but could be a disappointment for frothy stocks.
U.S. assets surged on Trump’s election, reflecting expectations for a repeat of his growth- and markets-bullish first term. Since early October as the odds of a Trump victory rose, U.S. stocks outperformed non-U.S. stocks by nearly 12%, the 10-year Treasury yield has popped +66 basis points (bps) and the U.S. Dollar (USD) rose +5.9%. Market optimism is based on the assumption that a boost from deficit spending (tax cuts) and deregulation will outweigh any drag on growth from tariffs and curtailed immigration.
Political analysts doubt a wider deficit can pass through a Republican house with such a slim majority. While it is true that Trump’s first term policies (e.g. tax cuts) were positive for growth and markets, a repeat is unlikely in the current political environment. We conclude the policy mix likely to be enacted will be growth-negative, resulting in a -60 bps hit to U.S. growth (-70 bps to global growth) and a one-time +80 bps increase to U.S. inflation for the following reasons:
We would expect the Fed to continue to ease closer to a neutral rate of 3-3.5% by the end of 2025, as they look through the one-time price level adjustment of tariffs and focus on the weaker growth impact of the policies above. For markets, weaker growth, temporarily higher inflation and continued Fed easing will be supportive for bonds, especially with no major fiscal easing (beyond the 2017 Trump tax cuts extension), but could undermine expensive and overbought stocks.
Bottom-line: Markets are bullish on Trump’s second term, hoping for tax cuts and better growth. We expect no net stimulus and a decent size hit from tariffs and immigration. This should be bullish for bonds as the Fed continues cutting, but could be a disappointment for frothy stocks.
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Head of Global Multi-Asset Team
Global Multi-Asset Team
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