In our upcoming AB Disruptor Series webcast, we’ll explore the changing dynamics of US elections and the potential implications for markets and investing.
There’s a long-standing viewpoint among investors that US elections don’t really matter to markets. But we would argue that today’s election results do matter. We’ll examine this topic from multiple dimensions, as well as the implications for investors, in our upcoming AB Disruptor Series webcast, “2024 US Election Outlook: Politics Don’t Matter?”
Register here for the September 30 event.
Over the long arc of history, market returns have been strong no matter which party wrests control of the White House. Since 1937, the average annualized price return for the Dow Jones Industrial Average has been 7.0% under Democratic presidents and 6.7% under Republicans. So, staying invested would have been a sound plan for portfolios.
Under divided governments, with their inherent gridlock and inertia, returns have been higher than under unified governments (8.1% versus 5.1%). Indeed, we think the biggest mistake investors could have made would have been to believe that the party winning the presidency mattered—and to invest with that in mind. Republican or Democrat, the results of that strategy have fallen far short of simply staying invested.
The “Clean Slate” Presidential Election Era
The story of how election results have become more meaningful has its economic origins around 1980. The ensuing decades would bless investors with a historic bull market. A super-cocktail of factors drove the rally: globalization, automation, falling rates and inflation, and favorable demographics.
The numbers were impressive. From 1981 to 1999, the S&P 500 averaged over 18% a year. Bond returns, fueled by a massive tailwind of falling rates, were also very strong. All told, many investors enjoyed, by a wide margin, two of the longest bull markets in American history—separated by Black Monday in 1987. Excluding that event, it can be argued that the entire period marked the single longest bull market. And the economy hummed, with only one mild recession in the early 1990s.
During that time, the US electoral map resembled a wide-open slate for both Republican and Democratic presidential candidates, with many states‘ electoral votes in play. At the extreme, Ronald Reagan won reelection in 1984 by essentially sweeping the entire map (Display). His only narrow loss was in Minnesota, the home state of his opponent, Walter Mondale.