Stocks Do Well with Total Democratic Dominance in Washington, Study Says

History shows that equities advance an average 9.1% then, LPL research finds.


Well, we have total Democratic control in Washington: the White House and both congressional chambers. Turns out that stocks actually do well under 100% rule by the Dems.

“There have been some concerns about stocks given a blue wave,” LPL Research Chief Market Strategist Ryan Detrick said in a research note. “Actually, stocks have done well with this scenario.”

The S&P 500 Index gained six out of the past seven times this occurred, with the lone loss in 1994, where the S&P 500 Index dipped just a smidgen, according to Detrick, who charts historical market behavior.

Over the past 70 years, starting with the presidency of Harry Truman in 1951, when the Democrats pulled the hat trick (three goals by one player in ice hockey), the market rose just over three-quarters of the time, with an average annual advance of 9.1%.

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.

Stocks do the best when Congress is split between the two parties, according to another LPL study, which didn’t include who held the White House. From 1950 through 2019, a split Congress meant the S&P returned an average 17.2% annually. When the Republicans controlled both chambers, the increase was 13.4%. When the Democrats ruled both the House of Representatives and the Senate, the index rose 10.7%, the laggard in this match-up.

Last week, Capitol Hill’s power arrangement became clear with Democrats’ sweep of two Georgia Senate seats in runoff elections. The partisan split in the upper house is 50-50, but Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will break the tie for the Democrats. The party retained control of the House of Representatives, although its margin narrowed amid GOP gains in November.

Last year, many on Wall Street feared that a Democratic romp would bring higher taxes and regulations, but the narrowness of the partisan divide now gives them comfort that nothing radical will happen.

Goldman Sachs last week forecast that total Democratic control will help economic growth because it boosts the chances of a third round of stimulus, a policy move that Senate Republicans were doubtful about.

Related Stories:

A Divided Congress Is Good for Stocks, Study Says

How GDP and Stocks Do When Dems and GOP Control the Presidency and Congress

Vaccines and Pent-Up Demand Will Jazz Stocks, Says Paul Tudor Jones

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

National Pension Service of Korea Wagers Offices, Hotels Will Recover

The world’s third largest pension fund placed a $1 billion bet on public global real estate with asset manager Russell Investments.


The National Pension Service of Korea (NPS) has awarded a $1 billion global real estate mandate to Russell Investments, betting that offices, hotels, and other public properties will swing back after the world recovers from the pandemic. 

The mandate will help the world’s third largest pension fund capitalize on the public real estate markets to complement its private real estate portfolio, as well as improve its risk-adjusted return, and diversify the fund, according to a statement from Scott Kim, head of the real estate investment division at NPS. 

It’s the second such mandate awarded to Russell Investments from the South Korean pension fund, which has $710 billion in assets, the firm said last month. 

The asset manager expects that public real estate is expected to attract more cash flow, thanks to continually frothy markets and low interest rates, particularly as the outlook for the asset class has altered with the COVID-19 vaccine. Demand for public real estate is expected to come back after the distribution of the vaccine this year. 

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.

“Successful distribution of COVID-19 vaccines should enable demand for public real estate to recover, particularly for the most impacted property sectors, such as retail, office, and lodging,” Bruce Eidelson, director and senior equity portfolio manager at Russell Investments, said in a statement. 

“We expect the ever-broadening intra-sector performance dispersion will create a better active management environment which can produce significant return over the benchmark,” he added.

The overseas mandate also comes as NPS has signaled that it will increase its allocation into global equities up to 50% by 2024, versus 35% in 2019, according to its most recent fiscal report. The pension fund has invested up to $260 billion in global investments, as of October. 

Related Stories: 

Kentucky Retirement Systems Leans into Stocks, Real Estate

New York State Pension Expands into Real Estate, Absolute Return

Will Climate Change’s Rising Seas Drown Real Estate, Insurance?

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

«