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Showing Original Post only (View all)TRUMPS MYSTERIOUS STOCK BOOM [View all]
By James Surowiecki at the New Yorker
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/03/06/trumps-mysterious-stock-boom
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the run-up to last years Presidential election, pundits, economists, and Wall Street analysts agreed on one thing: a Donald Trump Presidency would be a disaster for the stock market. The common wisdom is that markets hate uncertainty. Theyre all about prediction, and Trump is unpredictability personified. Citigroup said that a Trump win would send the S. & P. 500 down three to five per cent, and, on Election Day, the hedge fund Bridgewater Associates told its clients that the Dow could fall almost two thousand pointsa full ten per centif Trump was elected. As the result became clear, these forecasts briefly looked accurate: stock-market futures took a vertiginous overnight tumble. But the day after Trumps victory markets rebounded, and, as he never tires of boasting, theyve risen since. The Dow is up more than thirteen per cent, an impressive gain by historical standards.
At first glance, this seems bizarre. Trumps first five weeks in office have been even more chaotic than expected, and the global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index has spiked to levels unseen in this century. During Barack Obamas Presidency, many Republicans and economists blamed uncertainty about the Administrations policies for the slow recovery from the recession. Yet Trump is far more volatile and unpredictable than Obama ever wasrisking a trade war with China, vowing to punish companies that move production abroad, calling for a new nuclear arms raceand markets are giddy with delight. Businesses are excited, too. A PwC study of private companies saw an unprecedented post-election jump in optimism, and, in December, the National Federation of Independent Businesses found that small-business owners were unusually optimistic. The new Administration looks as if it will be a roller-coaster ride. So why are companies and investors keen to jump aboard?
As far as business policy is concerned, there were two Trumps on the campaign trail. The candidate who appealed to the white working class was a blustery populist who promised to tear up trade agreements, bring jobs back to the U.S., and use Americas bargaining power to drive down drug prices. The other Trump was a classic Republican businessman, who vowed to slash taxes, resurrect coal production, and keep Washington from meddling in business. Hed repeal Dodd-Frank, soften other regulations, and curb the E.P.A. Markets have bet that the second Trump will prevail, and so far it looks like theyre right.
Trump has thrown a few bones to Main Street, such as scrapping the Trans-Pacific Partnership (which was more or less dead anyway), but hes already backing away from populist positions. The commitment to bargaining for lower drug prices didnt survive a meeting with pharmaceutical executives; Trump came out of it saying that he was opposed to price fixing. Meanwhile, he has filled his Cabinet with corporate executives, handed the E.P.A. to a fervent opponent of environmental regulation, and threatened to rescind an Obama regulation making millions of workers eligible for overtime pay. He has launched efforts to dismantle Dodd-Frank and to halt a new regulation requiring financial advisers to act in the best interest of their clients. Agencies have been told that for any new regulation they introduce they have to get rid of two existing ones.
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