Opening Bell: Stocks, Futures Rise On Election Result, Fed Speculation; Gold Up

 | Nov 09, 2020 07:09

  • Biden promises unity but a divided US Congress, unable to agree on stimulus is expected to force the Fed to increase QE
  • Gold climbed despite a strong dollar and rising stocks
  • Key Events/h2

    US futures, including for the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 point to a jump on Wall Street when markets open on Monday. European markets are all trading in the green on positive momentum following Joseph R. Biden's US presidential election win.

    Treasury yields fell and oil rebounded despite concerns that increased coronavirus cases in the US and Europe will delay an economic recovery.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Last week, markets rallied on speculation of a Blue Wave in the US elections that would pave the way for a massive coronavirus stimulus package. However, as the counting began, the focus shifted to the new reality. Investors are betting that the Democratic president-elect not control over the Senate, leaving him stuck with administrative gridlock, and all of President Donald Trump’s tax cuts and deregulations.

    However, now the market narrative is that Biden’s inability to launch a massive fiscal aid package will force the US Federal Reserve to continue pumping cheap money into the economy while keeping rates historically low, which would continue to drive stock prices higher.

    When the bulls are charging any excuse will do, even if it conflicts with previous narratives.

    We've seen this before. Ahead of the 2016 presidential election, stocks were rallying on the expectation of a win by Democratic nominee Hilary Clinton, and an unlikely win by Republican Donald Trump was expected to see markets tank.

    However, after the unbelievable happened and Trump, against all the odds, won, markets sold off for a mere 3 hours afterward, but then reversed sharply and continued climbing.

    The 2016 narrative flipped from Trump being a disaster for markets, because of his protectionist rhetoric, to his being a staunch enabler, because of his pro-business approach to tax cuts and deregulation—all of which was well known beforehand.

    Over the weekend, US cases of COVID-19 hit 10 million as the country reported more than 100,000 new infections for a fourth consecutive day. Cold weather compounded by holiday gatherings is expected to add fuel to the already out of control viral fire.

    Despite this, S&P 500 futures notched a 1.5% advance this morning, adding to last week’s 7.3% gain, the strongest up-move since April. Contracts on the tech-heavy NASDAQ 100 index, which have outperformed since Tuesday’s vote, were also up more than 2%.

    In Europe, the Stoxx 600 opened 0.5% higher and shot up to a 1.5% gain.