I will promise not to hijack my own website with too much in the way of US politics, but it does influence the markets in general as the current president will manipulate stock markets in a manner that best suits his political fortunes. Also the perception of Trump’s re-electability will have an impact on capital flows.
Back in my year-end report, I wrote:
USA Politics
In my previous year’s report, I made an educated guess that President Donald Trump would make all the gestures of running again for president but not actually run. Looking at the lead-up to what is a presidential election year, I am going to back out that prediction, mainly because of the competition that Trump is facing.
Odds markets have the following:
Biden: 2:1
Sanders: 3:1
Warren: 5:1
Buttigieg: 8:1
Bloomberg: 16:1
Hillary: 27:1
Yang: 34:1In my scorecard, I would rank Sanders #1 probability to win the thing. My guess is that Bernie Sanders (“authentic”) is going to give the Democratic Party establishment a run for their money, much more so than when he did in 2016. The evidence is in the fundraising figures. The fact that he has gone through the entire primary process before is a huge assist in terms of his campaign structure and this cannot be underestimated.
Likely to place second is Pete Buttigieg (“young”, “first (credible) LBGT presidential candidate”). He checks the correct Democratic Party boxes.
Third will be Elizabeth Warren (“establishment”). I would view Warren as having a better chance than the other establishment candidate, former VP Joe Biden. For the life of me, I can’t understand why Biden has been ranked so highly other than incumbency.
Bloomberg has the huge disadvantage of trying to replicate what Trump did to the Republican party, but it won’t work. And in the very rare chance he actually did win, I do not think he would contrast well to Trump in the general election, and everybody knows it.
I am fairly certain on my Sanders / Buttigieg projection, and absolutely certain that Biden is toast (he will likely give up after South Carolina, which is his strongest state, and held on the leap year day February 29, 2020), but the question is where the establishment vote is going to end up – originally I thought it was going to be Elizabeth Warren, but now it is looking like a contest between her, Amy Klobuchar or Michael Bloomberg. Interesting times indeed. Warren’s performance in the technology-error riddled Iowa caucus is good enough to give her credibility in New Hampshire (and geographically it is a closer state for her), but in future primaries, it will be interesting to watch that Democratic establishment vote.