Monthly Market Recap: Post-Election Positioning
11 November 2024
Read Time 3 MIN
Market Overview: A Tale of Change and Continuity
The American people have spoken, and the result is in: President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect J.D. Vance are set to lead the country. The markets cheered the Republican win, buoyed by hopes for tax cuts and deregulation. Tariffs might not thrill everyone, but this outcome lifted the fog of uncertainty. Now, we’re watching to see if this new leadership can bridge a divided nation. Let’s keep sight of the bigger picture. Our main investment theme—financial excess—is intact. When financial conditions are loose, assets with scarce value, like gold, bitcoin, and real estate, tend to outperform. This dynamic remains at the core of our strategy.
Post-Election Positioning
Fiscal Policy: A Fork in the Road
Modern American history is hallmarked by overspending, and the outcome of this election is unlikely to change that trajectory. Overspending is not specific to any political party. History shows both parties have a penchant for spending:
U.S. Total Public Debt Across Presidential Terms over the Last 20 Years
Source: Bloomberg as of 2024.
The critical debate now concerns fiscal policy. Option one is austerity, which involves trimming debt and banking on economic growth fueled by innovations like AI. This is a hopeful scenario, but it may take longer to unfold. Option two? Fiscal dominance, where the government’s debt demands push the central bank to prioritize keeping rates low, regardless of inflation risks. The likely near-term scenario is “business as usual”: over-borrow to overspend, just with red-leaning policies. The prudent move? Hope for growth but prepare for fiscal dominance—diversify with gold, bitcoin, and other real assets.
Equities: A Challenging Month
Stocks took a hit in October, facing rising geopolitical tensions, election jitters, and strong economic growth data. We seem to be in an awkward economic paradox where good news is bad and bad news is good because of the implications for future rate policies.
The month favored large-cap over small-cap, growth over value, and U.S. over international equities:
Index | October Return (%) |
S&P 500 | -0.91 |
Russell 3000 Value | -1.20 |
Russell 3000 Growth | -0.73 |
Russell 2000 | -1.44 |
MSCI EAFE | -5.44 |
MSCI Emerging Markets | -4.45 |
Fixed Income: A Strong Job Market, Rising Rates
Strong employment and consumer spending cast doubt on Fed rate cuts, sending bond prices down during the period. As demand for these bonds waned, yields climbed, pushing up borrowing costs across the board. A robust labor market turned expectations of rate cuts into a reality of rising interest costs.
Real Assets: Gold Gains, Oil Lags
Gold glistened in October, driven higher by the same factors that drove equities lower. Classic investor behavior is to buy top-performing assets. Gold is now that asset, and flows into gold ETFs are rising. Global physically backed gold ETFs have been experiencing inflows for the past six months and raised $4.3 billion in October. In our view, this trend is just beginning and will push gold prices significantly higher over the medium term.
Meanwhile, oil couldn’t catch a break. At the same time, Middle East tensions briefly boosted prices, weak demand from China, and ample supply kept WTI below $70 per barrel—a classic case of the 'safe-haven' effect favoring gold. In contrast, oil struggled due to economic forces.
Digital Assets: Bitcoin’s Moonshot
Bitcoin hit a historic high, soaring above $76,000 after the election results were announced. Trump’s pro-crypto stance is fueling optimism, which could attract more institutional players and enhance bitcoin’s appeal as a hedge against inflation. Trump’s tax-cutting agenda only fuels Bitcoin’s rise as a digital store of value.
Bottom Line
Our advice: balance hope and preparation. The landscape may change, but the need for diversification doesn’t. In a world of fiscal excess and political shifts, gold, bitcoin, and other real assets remain smart hedges in a volatile landscape.