Current:Home > ScamsElections have less impact on your 401(k) than you might think -Core Financial Strategies
Elections have less impact on your 401(k) than you might think
View
Date:2025-04-21 22:29:29
NEW YORK (AP) — Much like those annoying political TV ads, the warnings come back every four years: All the uncertainty around the U.S. presidential election could have big consequences for your 401(k)!
Such warnings can raise anxiety, but remember: If your 401(k) is like many retirement savers’, with most invested in funds that track the S&P 500 or other broad indexes, all the noise may not make much of a difference.
Stocks do tend to get shakier in the months leading up to Election Day. Even the bond market sees an average 15% rise in volatility from mid-September of an election year through Election Day, according to a review by Monica Guerra, a strategist at Morgan Stanley. That may partly be because financial markets hate uncertainty. In the runup to the election, uncertainty is high about what kinds of policies will win out.
But after the results come in, regardless of which party wins the White House, the uncertainty dissipates, and markets get back to work. The volatility tends to steady itself, Guerra’s review shows.
More than which party controls the White House, what’s mattered for stocks over the long term is where the U.S. economy is in its cycle as it moved from recession to expansion and back again through the decades.
“Over the long term, market performance is more closely correlated with the business cycle than political party control,” Guerra wrote in a recent report.
Where the economy currently is in its cycle is up for debate. It’s been growing since the 2020 recession caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Some pessimistic investors think the expansion is near its end, with all the cumulative slowing effects of the Federal Reserve’s hikes to interest rates in prior years still to be felt. Other, more optimistic investors believe the expansion may still have legs now that the Fed is cutting rates to juice the economy.
Politics may have some sway underneath the surface of stock indexes and influence which industries and sectors are doing the best. Tech and financial stocks have historically done better than the rest of the market one year after a Democratic president took office. For a Republican, meanwhile, raw-material producers were among the relative winners, according to Morgan Stanley.
Plus, control of Congress may be just as important as who wins the White House. A gridlocked Washington with split control will likely see less sweeping changes in fiscal or tax policy, no matter who the president is.
Of course, the candidates in this election do differ from history in some major ways. Former President Donald Trump is a strong proponent of tariffs, which raise the cost of imports from other countries, for example.
In a scenario where the United States applied sustained and universal tariffs, economists and strategists at UBS Global Wealth Management say U.S. stocks could fall by around 10% because the tariffs would ultimately act like a sales tax on U.S. households.
But they also see a relatively low chance of such a scenario happening, at roughly 10%.
veryGood! (5289)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Kenya ends arrangement to swap doctors with Cuba. The deal was unpopular with Kenyan doctors
- Voting begins in Ohio in the only election this fall to decide abortion rights
- Entrance to Baltimore Washington International Airport closed due to law enforcement investigation
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Moving on: Behind Nathan Eovaldi gem, Rangers sweep Orioles to reach first ALCS since 2011
- Watch this sweet Golden Retriever comfort their tearful owner during her time of need
- Bipartisan resolution to support Israel has over 400 co-sponsors: Texas congressman
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Man, 19, pleads guilty to third-degree murder in death of teen shot in Pittsburgh school van
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Ex-NFL player Sergio Brown arrested in Southern California in connection to mother’s slaying
- We got free period products in school bathrooms by putting policy over politics
- What was Hamas thinking? For over three decades, it has had the same brutal idea of victory
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Body of missing non-verbal toddler found in creek near his Clinton County, Michigan home
- Powerball jackpot at $1.73 billion after no big winner Monday. What to know about historic streak
- Mary Lou Retton, U.S. Olympic icon, fighting a 'very rare' form of pneumonia
Recommendation
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
Morgan State University plans to build wall around campus after homecoming week shooting
Americans consume a lot of red meat. Here's why you shouldn't.
Holly Willoughby quits 'This Morning' after man arrested for alleged attempt to murder her
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
A new 'Frasier' seeks success with fresh characters who seem a lot like the old ones
Reba McEntire Shares Rare Insight Into Relationship With Boyfriend Rex Linn
Missouri high school teacher suspended for having porn site page has resigned, superintendent says