Biden's Exit Delivers Fresh Shock to Twitchy Markets

President Joe Biden stands with Vice President Kamala Harris May 29, 2024, at a campaign event in in Philadelphia. Photo: Hannah Beier/Bloomberg

What You Need to Know

It injects a wild card into the presidential campaign that will likely translate into volatility.
The Trump trade — favoring sectors and strategies seen as benefiting from his push for looser fiscal policy, higher trade tariffs and weaker regulations — is likely to face headwinds.
The most recent example of a sitting president not seeking a second term was Lyndon Johnson in 1968.

Investors have been amassing wagers on Donald Trump’s return to the White House for weeks, trimming holdings of long-term U.S. bonds and buying Bitcoin, among other things. Now, they’re considering whether Joe Biden’s exit from the race boosts the odds of a Democrat victory — and how much they must recalibrate their bets.

One thing seems certain after the president dropped his reelection bid: Though the announcement was widely expected as the 81-year-old faced pressure from allies, it injects a wild card into the campaign that will likely translate into volatility for markets.

“This means more uncertainty,” said Gene Munster, co-founder and managing partner at Deepwater Asset Management. “There was a lot of confidence about Trump winning, and markets won’t like this new uncertainty, along with the news cycle about who is in, who is out, and all those unknowns.”

Biden’s announcement Sunday that he was ending his effort to seek another term and endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris is the latest of several political shocks absorbed by markets in recent weeks.

First, Biden stumbled through a disastrous debate performance against Trump, prompting investors to rapidly downgrade his chances of winning the election. Then, there was the failed assassination attempt against Trump, which only deepened the sense among many in the market that he’d win in November.

See also  Mapping cholesterol trends for life insurance applicants

As investors digest the latest news, the Trump trade — favoring sectors and strategies seen as benefiting from the Republican’s advocacy of looser fiscal policy, higher trade tariffs and weaker regulations — is likely to face headwinds.

This, while investors are also bracing for potential market convulsions from the wave of second-quarter earnings results that are just starting to come through, and as they continue to plot scenarios for when the Federal Reserve will begin cutting interest rates.

Investors React

Early trading in Asia on Monday was relatively subdued, suggesting investors are taking a wait-and-see approach. The dollar was quoted slightly lower against major peers, while Bitcoin hovered around $68,000 and equity futures were hardly changed.

In the Treasury market, US longer-maturity bond futures rose more than their shorter-dated equivalents, pointing to a modest reversal of the so-called curve steepener trade associated with a victory for Trump.

“The main thought process in the bond market should be what this new uncertainty brings. People had gotten to the point where they were piling into the Trump trade, with it beginning to become a real narrative. I had thought that was way too soon,” said Glen Capelo, managing director at Mischler Financial.

“The curve steepening trade will probably have to unwind a little bit,” Capelo added.

Markets may be jumpy as traders wait to see if Harris secures her party’s nomination and gathers enough momentum to challenge Trump’s lead in the polls. As traders await new polls reflecting Biden’s absence, betting market PredictIt has Harris as the favorite to become the Democratic nominee, but Trump still favored to win the presidency.

See also  New Retirement Income Model Shows Which Workers Are at Highest Risk

The basics of the Trump trade have taken the form of support for rising U.S. bond yields, gains in bank, health and energy stocks as well as Bitcoin and a stronger dollar — even as Trump himself has signaled he prefers the U.S. currency to weaken.