Market Commentary: S&P 500 Posts a Positive August as the Election Enters the Home Stretch

S&P 500 Posts a Positive August as the Election Enters the Home Stretch

Key Takeaways

  • Stocks eventually gained in a very volatile August, but be aware September and October are coming up.
  • Various other groups did well, another sign this bull market is broadening out.
  • The Dow hit new highs, something that tends to suggest a strong economy.
  • With convention season over, we provide an update on policy.
  • Be cautious about all the promises that are being made now—many are unrealistic.
  • Congressional majorities will be narrow, which will limit what a Republican or Democratic Congress can do, and a mixed Congress will face even greater limits.
  • No matter who wins we’re likely to see some Trump era individual tax cuts extended, but that also means more deficits.

Up Four Months in a Row, But Here Comes September

What a month it was for investors. We started off the month with some huge down days over worries centered around the yen carry trade unraveling and a slowing U.S. economy, only to get past those worries almost as quickly and see stocks move right back to new highs (or near new highs). In the end, the S&P 500 was higher by 2.3% for a fourth consecutive monthly gain. As we’ve been noting all summer, election years tend to see summer rallies and that has played out nicely once again in 2024.

Next week we will discuss September in more detail, but it is worth noting that September is indeed the worst month of the year for the S&P 500 since 1950, over the past 20 years, and over the past 10 years. Oh, it is also the third worst month in an election year, with October the worst month. The bottom line, after one of the best starts to an election year ever for stocks, some type of seasonal weakness or pre-election jitters would be perfectly normal over the coming two months. Again, we’ll discuss this more in detail over the coming weeks, but just get ready for some potential volatility.

The Rally Broadens Out

Last week might have been flattish if you looked at the major index returns, but what stood out to us was that a recently popular AI stock was down nearly 8% and we saw many groups do just fine. It reported strong earnings, but the reality was expectations got a tad too high and the stock was pulled back to earth after huge year-to-date gains. If it was down like this last year at this time, we’d have fully expected to see a sea of red for investors, but that wasn’t the case last week, a great sign of improving market breadth.

Financials and industrials closed at their highest levels ever on a weekly close, while small caps and midcaps continue to show strength as well.

We’ve long said that the next stage to this bull market will be a broadening out of the rally, and not just the high-flying tech and communication services names doing well. Well, that is happening right before our eyes. A great way to see this is that the S&P 500 equal weight index closed at a new all-time high on Friday. This index weights all 500 names the same, so a few large names don’t dominate the overall action. It is another sign that many stocks are participating in this rally, which is a sign of a healthy market overall.

A Bullish Signal for the Economy

Two things to think about today.

  • Since the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) ended 15 years ago our economy has been in a recession only 1.1% of the time.
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average started trading on May 26, 1896, and last Friday it closed at the highest level EVER.

Think about how many endless discussions have focused on the ‘soon to come recession’ only for stocks to continue to soar.

Just the past year we’ve been hit with worries over the yield curve, leading indicator indexes (LEI), small sample-sized purchasing manager surveys, wars, inflation, and the Bank of Japan (BoJ) hiking rates by just over 25 basis points (as silly as that last one sounds, it happened three weeks ago). None of these things have slowed down the bull market.

Since 1900 the US economy has been in a recession 22.4% of the time. But did you know six months after a new all-time high in the Dow, it has been in a recession only 8.9% of the time? And the last time it hit a new high during a recession was in late 1982, which also kicked off a huge bull market.

One of the better indicators regarding the economy historically has been the stock market. Yes, stocks hit new highs right before COVID and in early 2007, but the great majority of the other times over the past generation new highs have meant an economy that was growing, not an economy in a recession. New highs are another clue that our economy will likely avoid a recession over the next six months (but probably longer).

Promises vs Reality: Presidential Election Edition

With both the Republican and Democratic party conventions over, it’s safe to say we’re in the home stretch of the presidential election. In fact, early voting starts in 10 days in North Carolina, a key swing state. That also means campaign rhetoric is heating up, and promises are being made—some wild ones, too, but this is politics in the homestretch of an election and it’s not too surprising.

Campaign Promises Go Wild

Let’s look at some of the “policy” proposals that have hit headlines recently, from both candidates. I put policy in quotes because some of these seem rather off the cuff, without a lot of heft and practical implementation details behind them.

Here’s something former President Trump first proposed, and then Vice President Harris copied: making tips tax-free. As simple as it may sound, it becomes complicated after a little bit of thought. For one thing, tipped workers don’t earn much and so their incomes aren’t taxed a lot anyway. Then the question is whether tips will be exempt from Social Security and Medicare taxes—if so, that will actually reduce lifetime average earnings for tipped workers, which means they’ll receive fewer Social Security benefits. More practically, if someone earns $30,000 with half of that from tips, the question is why they should pay lower taxes than someone who earns $30,000 in straight-up income. Then of course, you could also have a situation in which a lawyer who bills $200/hour receives an additional $200/hour in “tips.”

Another proposal from Harris is that she’ll ban price gouging in the food and grocery industry. This has received a lot of attention, but it’s very unclear what exactly this entails. A lot of commentary has focused on it being implemented via price controls, but I think we can safely conclude that will never happen. You just have to go back and look at how former Defense Secretary Don Rumsfeld, and his then assistant, Dick Cheney, struggled to implement price controls under the Nixon administration in the early 1970s—an experiment that will likely never be tried again, with good reason. In this case, it looks like the Harris “ban” will take the form of already existing bans against price gouging in 37 states, and similar to the one President Trump signed in March 2020 to prevent hoarding of health and medical resources. In any case, it’s unlikely to do much for food price inflation, and is a case where the “promise” runs far ahead of reality. For Trump’s part, he’s said he’ll direct all agency heads and Cabinet secretaries to “use every tool and authority at their disposal to defeat inflation”—not too many specifics there.

Trump has also said he’ll offer senior citizens massive relief by ending taxes on Social Security benefits (currently it’s not taxed on up to $25,000 for individuals, and 50% of benefits above that are not taxed). Technically, this will be lost revenue for the Social Security trust fund, but overall, it amounts to something like a $1.6-$1.8 trillion increase in the federal deficit over the next 10 years.

Both Harris and Trump have suggested enhancing child tax credits (CTC). Harris’s proposal would permanently increase it from $2,000 to $3,600—it was briefly at this level in 2021 but wasn’t extended due to its massive cost. In addition, she would also add a new CTC of up to $6,000 for middle- and lower-income families with children in their first year of life. Not to be outdone in the promises sweepstakes, Trump’s Vice Presidential nominee, J.D. Vance, floated the idea to increase the CTC to $5,000 for everyone. Think of what all of these, or any of these, would do to the deficit.

Let’s Get Real: Control of Congress Matters

Lost amid a lot of analysis of the above proposals is that they aren’t likely to move far in Congress. In addition to the presidential election, we also have the House up for re-election, alongside a third of Senate seats. Gauging real-time aggregated views from the prediction market site Polymarket, the Presidential election looks to be a toss-up, but things go in opposite directions for control of Congress. (Note that prediction markets aren’t necessarily all that predictive, but they provide a useful view of current collective sentiment around likely outcomes.) As of Sunday night, according to Polymarket:

  • Democrats have a 63% chance of winning the House
  • Republicans have a 72% chance of taking the Senate
  • Republicans have a 32% chance of a full sweep (Presidency, House, Senate) while Democrats have a 22% chance

There’s a reasonable chance we’re looking at split party control of Washington D.C. post-election, but even if not a lot of policies will require a two-third majority in the Senate to prevent a filibuster and a closely divided Senate or House gives the centrists of the majority party a lot of power. (Remember the influence Senators Manchen, Sinema, and Tester have had the last four years, and that Senators Collins, Murkowski, Romney, and McCain had during the Trump administration.) However, it’s really tax policy that is going to be the single-biggest issue next year, and that can potentially pass through the Senate under a process called “reconciliation,” which needs only a simple majority of 51 votes.

2025: A Big Year for Tax Policy

The Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2017, which former President Trump signed into law, contained both corporate and individual tax cuts. The corporate tax cuts (including dropping the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%) were permanent, but the individual tax cuts were all set to “sunset” at the end of 2025. Unless these tax cuts are pro-actively renewed, Americans will see their taxes go up starting in 2026. At the same time, renewing them will increase the deficit by $4.6 trillion over ten years, according to congressional scoring. Keep in mind that 2026 is a mid-term election year, and that’s going to crystallize Congress’s focus on getting something done.

The contours of tax policy are going to matter for investors as well, and so it’s worth walking through the broad areas.

Starting with a potential Harris administration, the biggest risk for markets is an increase in the corporate tax rate. However, given how close the House and Senate will be, an increase is unlikely, with a probability near zero if Republicans control even one chamber. Even if Democrats sweep, moderate senators are unlikely to agree to an increase in the corporate tax rate. At the same time, tax cuts for more wealthy households will probably not be renewed, though any deficit reduction from that side will likely be eaten up by expansion of the child tax credit.

With a potential Trump administration, the biggest risk is not tax policy—he’s said his administration would renew all the tax cuts, and perhaps even drop the corporate tax rate to 15% (music to investors’ ears). Instead, the big risk will be an expansion of the tariff regime, which a President can impose without Congress. We may see renewed trade wars, which could adversely impact capital expenditures and the production side of the economy (as it did in 2018).

The table below illustrates the various major policy changes and their likelihood under different scenarios of congressional control. The big takeaway is really at the bottom of the table, which shows the deficit increasing under all scenarios—it’s just a question of how much.

Populism and Deficits Are Here to Stay

The one through-line across all the proposals floating out there now, and what’s actually likely to be passed, is larger deficit spending, a sign that both candidates are leaning into populism. Campaigns always make a lot of promises during election season, but the populist rhetoric from both candidates is actually quite unusual, especially given where we are in the economic cycle.

The Federal government’s “primary balance,” which is revenue minus spending excluding interest payments on Treasury debt, is one way to measure how much net spending is happening at the Federal level. The chart below shows the primary balance as a percent of GDP. As you can see, prior to the 2010s, the primary balance was always in positive territory as economic expansions wore on. It fell into deficit only during recessions, which isn’t surprising because that’s when economic stabilizers (like unemployment benefits) kick in, and revenue collection drops (as there’s less income). In short, US fiscal policy has historically been counter-cyclical, which is generally what it should be.

But the late 2010s was markedly different, as the primary balance remained in deficit territory, hitting -2% of GDP by the end of 2019. We’re well removed from the pandemic right now, but the primary balance is still historically low, at -1.8% of GDP (something we’ve seen only in recessions prior to 2010). Given what the candidates are proposing, it’s fairly certain that the primary balance remains in deficit territory well into the second half of the 2020s.

 

As we wrote in our Midyear Outlook, deficit-financed spending can boost corporate profits if it doesn’t crowd out consumer spending or private sector investment. That’s positive for markets as well, since profits are what matter. In fact, this is something we saw as recently as 2016-2019, when profit growth surged on the back of higher fiscal deficits (due to the 2017 tax cuts). Even more recently, we’re seeing federal spending “crowd in” private investments on the manufacturing construction side—construction of computer, electrical, and electronic manufacturing facilities has jumped more than 1,100% since the end of 2020 in real terms. Over the last two years, profit growth was boosted by rising fiscal deficits, which more than offset rising household savings. At the same time, we saw a rise in productivity growth.

The main concern with deficit-fueled spending is whether it leads to inflation. It’s quite likely that a US economy that is near its productive capacity sees bouts of higher inflation as well, leading to higher interest rates. The good news is that inflation has been falling recently, and the Fed is poised to cut rates. Combine that with profit growth driven by more fiscal spending, and we have two positive tailwinds for equities over the next year.

 

This newsletter was written and produced by CWM, LLC. Content in this material is for general information only and not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. All performance referenced is historical and is no guarantee of future results. All indices are unmanaged and may not be invested into directly. The views stated in this letter are not necessarily the opinion of any other named entity and should not be construed directly or indirectly as an offer to buy or sell any securities mentioned herein. Due to volatility within the markets mentioned, opinions are subject to change without notice. Information is based on sources believed to be reliable; however, their accuracy or completeness cannot be guaranteed. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

S&P 500 – A capitalization-weighted index of 500 stocks designed to measure performance of the broad domestic economy through changes in the aggregate market value of 500 stocks representing all major industries.

The NASDAQ 100 Index is a stock index of the 100 largest companies by market capitalization traded on NASDAQ Stock Market. The NASDAQ 100 Index includes publicly-traded companies from most sectors in the global economy, the major exception being financial services.

A diversified portfolio does not assure a profit or protect against loss in a declining market.

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