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What the US Election Means for Business and the Economy
What the US Election Means for Business and the Economy
Bain’s Macro Trends group offers a post-election analysis of the business environment after the US election.
Article
Bain’s Macro Trends group offers a post-election analysis of the business environment after the US election.
The US has elected Donald Trump to become its 45th president, and the Republican Party has swept both houses of Congress.
This result will bring the US federal government under a single party for the first time since the election of President Obama in 2008. The results of this election caught financial markets by surprise as preelection polling predicted a Hillary Clinton win, with probabilities in the 70% range and with consensus polls indicating a 3–4 percentage point lead for the Democratic Party candidate.
As Trump’s win became more likely, major US equity market futures fell nearly 5%, and the Mexican peso fell as far as 12% at its low point in overnight trading. Financial markets gyrated rapidly across the evening and early-morning hours, but in contrast with market reactions after Brexit, they quickly retraced losses to less than half of their worst levels following Trump’s acceptance speech. Whereas the British pound fell nearly 8% immediately after the Brexit vote and kept falling, the swing in the US dollar (except for the dollar to Mexican peso rate) had largely moderated itself overnight.
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It is extremely premature to assess the full financial market reaction to the election results and their implications for the broader macroeconomy. Our greatest immediate post-election concern is spillover distress from financial markets into the real economy. The rapid signs of moderation in the financial markets are encouraging initial indications that financial market shock may not spread to become a driver of distress to the real economy.
If a new cycle of financial panic starts in the coming weeks or months, especially affecting risk spreads in the corporate bond market, then the negative pressure on business investment could overwhelm the US economy at a relatively vulnerable stage in its business cycle and pull forward a recession to as early as 2017. While not our base case scenario, this is the most likely among our alternate downside scenarios.
As a reminder, the president-elect enters office January 20, 2017, and the new Congressional term commences January 3, 2017. Whatever the change in policy direction between the current administration and the incoming one, nothing will happen for two months, giving ample time to more fully digest the potential implications of this election result. More informed speculation on policy direction will become possible as the incoming president’s Cabinet takes shape.
This election result represents a fairly material change in the potential direction of US policy on multiple fronts. Beyond the obvious areas that dominated the election debate (e.g., trade, immigration, taxes and foreign policy), industries that could see outsized impact include healthcare (Affordable Care Act), energy, financial services and technology. We will carefully monitor and assess these potential changes, but unless financial markets create a situation of crisis, there is time to make these evaluations as more information becomes available.
To that end, a few key points are important to keep in mind when considering the immediate impact of this election on the macro business environment for our clients operating in and around the US:
Bain’s Macro Trends Group will continue to monitor the situation and issue further Briefing Points as information and analysis warrants over the coming weeks and months.
This work has been based on secondary market research; analysis of financial information available or provided to Bain & Company; and a range of interviews with customers, competitors and industry experts. Bain has not independently verified this information and makes no representation or warranty, express or implied, that such information is accurate or complete.
Projected market and financial information, analyses and conclusions contained herein are based (unless sourced otherwise) on the information described above and Bain’s judgment and should not be construed as definitive forecasts or guarantees of future performance or results.
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