HomeBusinessTraders think it's 2016, while the stock market must live in 2024

Traders think it’s 2016, while the stock market must live in 2024

(Bloomberg) — A sense of déjà vu swept Wall Street this week as Donald Trump’s election victory delivered a jolt to the stock market on par with what happened after his victory eight years ago. Small caps soared, banks jumped and the S&P 500 Index had its best election day in history and the strongest week in 12 months.

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The challenge, however, is that this is 2024, not 2016. A lot of things have changed since then.

“As Mark Twain once said, ‘History does not repeat itself, it often rhymes,’” said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak + Co., LLC. “So investors should remember the old playbook, but not.”

When Trump ran for president in early 2016, US stocks were on shaky footing. They posted their worst start to a year since the financial crisis, falling more than 5% in January. By the time of his inauguration, the S&P 500 was up 9.5% in 2016 after ending 2015 in the red. The index traded at 17 times expected earnings. The 10-year Treasury yield was about 2.5% and the Fed Funds rate was 0.75%.

Eight years later, the landscape is very different. Stock valuations are rising. The S&P 500 is at an all-time high, surpassing 6,000 points for the first time ever after rising 56% over the past two years. The tech-hit Nasdaq 100 Index is also at a record after nearly doubling since early 2023. The S&P is trading at 23 times expected earnings, about 40% above its average since 2000. The yield on 10-year Treasury notes is ​​4.3%. and the Fed Funds rate is 4.75%.

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In other words, the stock market was fairly well prepared to tear up at the start of Trump’s first term. But this time, shares appear to be at or near a peak, and there may not be much room left to go.

“It’s not what you would normally think — that rates are going way up, and that the stock market is going to rise substantially when rates go up — unless inflation goes up along with it,” said David Miller, co-founder and chief investment officer at Catalyst Funds. . “That, I think, is what happens.”

Inflationary policy

The premise behind traders’ reaction to Trump’s victory is that his promises of tax cuts and deregulation will continue to propel stock markets to new heights. The downside, however, is that the president-elect’s protectionist trade policies and plans for mass deportations of undocumented workers are seen as inflationary and potentially threatening growth.

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