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Midterm Election Impact On Stock Market

DAVID K. RANDALL   11/ 4/10 08:52 AM ET   AP

Midterms Stock Market
U.S. Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, is seen on a television screen on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2010. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

NEW YORK — Next year will be a year unlike any other for the stock market.

The Republican takeover of the House of Representatives on Tuesday means Wall Street will be contending with three situations in 2011 that drive stock prices:

_ The year before a president faces re-election.

_ The year after a president has lost control of Congress.

_ The second year of a fragile economic expansion.

The market often behaves a certain way in each of those situations, but history isn't helpful now because investors have never faced this trifecta before. What's clear is that what happens in Washington will be watched even more closely by investors next year.

"This election is more important than the average one because of all of the economic and policy issues that remain uncertain," says Robert Doll, the chief investment strategist at BlackRock, an investing firm with $3.4 trillion in assets under management.

Any mishandling of the economy by politicians will mean that "the fragile economic recovery we have is going to be hit over the head, and we would have to think about a double-dip recession all over again," Doll says.

Here's a look at the three situations coinciding next year and how they could affect the stock market:

_THE YEAR BEFORE A PRESIDENT RUNS FOR ELECTION:

Since 1945, the Dow Jones industrial average has gained an average of 19 percent the year before a sitting president runs. That's more than double the 7.9 percent average annual gain during the same period. If you take out the 10 years when the president was running, the average gain drops to only 5.8 percent.

No one has been able to prove why this happens. One theory is that the president pushes through politically popular spending measures to help his re-election. But that doesn't explain why the market also tends to rise in the third year of a president's second term. The Dow rose 25.2 percent, for example, in 1999, the third year of President Clinton's second term. Since 1902 the Dow has gained, on average, 13.7 percent in the third year of a president's first term and 10.9 percent in the third year of a president's second term.

_THE YEAR AFTER A PRESIDENT LOSES CONTROL OF CONGRESS

Presidents whose party controlled both houses of Congress have lost at least one chamber five times in the past 80 years. Stock returns in the following year haven't followed a pattern. The Dow plunged 53 percent in 1931 and gained 34 percent in 1995. Gains in the other three years ranged from 2.2 percent to 20.8 percent. That makes it impossible to forecast what will happen this time. The change in Congress in 1931 came during the Great Depression, while the 1995 transition came during the first part of the Internet boom. The next Congress faces a fragile economic period, which could mean that the market offers another single-digit gain like this year.

Gridlock hasn't been great for stocks. Since 1945, the Standard and Poor's 500 index has gained 4 percent in years when Congress was split between parties. It increased 8 percent when Congress was controlled by one party and the White House another. When a single party was in control of Washington, the index gained an average of 11 percent.

_SLOW-GROWING ECONOMY

The economy is growing at a 2 percent annual rate, according to the latest estimate by the Commerce Department. That's slow by historical standards and shows that the end of the recession 17 months ago hasn't translated into a robust economic expansion.

Stocks have been in a bull market for 18 months, pushing the Dow up 70 percent since it hit a 12-year low in March 2009. That gain is larger than normal but isn't surprising considering that the rally followed the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. During slow recoveries like this one, bull markets typically last 30 months and bring gains of 44 percent overall, according to Ned Davis Research.

Corporate profits are improving, and wealthy consumers are starting to make some costly purchases. If the economy continues to improve, stocks will likely rise. But don't expect large gains because the economy needs to grow 3 percent or more to bring down the country's 9.6 percent unemployment rate. That's unlikely soon because residential and commercial construction remains weak, and construction fuels economic recoveries.

So what's an investor to do given this abnormal year? The best thing may be to follow your long-term plans regardless of what happens in Washington.

"There's no way to tell what's going to happen, or we would all be rich," says Paul Larson, the chief equities strategist at Morningstar.

(This version corrects typos in 9th and 13th paragraphs)

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guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
01:44 AM on 11/07/2010
Anyone investing in the stock market has better odds in Las Vegas. And remember, the value is not owning the stock, it's running the company. CEO's have dictatorial powers in companies, with bond holders trumping everyone. Why would any individual invest in stocks? The unlimited shorts, the front running, and the flash trading are all bent to make you lose your money.
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05:46 PM on 11/04/2010
With just a hint of the GOP's power gains, the corporate overlords, hedge fund weasels, and robber barons are tightening the screws, crude oil and gas prices to name a few............
03:52 PM on 11/04/2010
Gotta love how the press covers every little machination of the stock market every single day . . . as if it has ANY effect on the majority of people and their concerns. The majority of Americans have less than $5,000 in the stock market!

They should be covering the Fed's monetary policies and discussing what the recent decision to begin printing hundreds of billions of dollars will mean for average people. The inability to buy food due to commodity inflation means a heck of a lot more to everyday Americans than the stock market BUBBLE that's being blown up thanks to the Fed's 0% interest rates, Eric Holder's unwillingness to investigate and prosecute financial criminals, and Congress' unwillingness to act on real financial reform.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dragonladywaltham
politicians are SUPPOSED to serve Americans
11:08 PM on 11/06/2010
The people you are talking about must be young. The rest of us have our RETIREMENT savings in there!!! A little more than 5K!
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03:16 PM on 11/04/2010
With Boehner as Speaker of the House, I'd buy booze stocks.
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05:47 PM on 11/04/2010
speaker of the soused, is more like it..............
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Davest
6' 9" with the afro......
03:12 PM on 11/04/2010
Hmm,
While I don't know what the Stock Market is going to do in the coming year. I do know that the price of oil is up $6 a barrel since the Repub's took over.

We'll probably have another market adjustment.

I bet oil will be at $90 a barrel by Thanksgiving. Which is a good thing, if you happen to have oil wells in the North Dakota Bakken.

While the Republicans are bad news for the people of this country, it's good news for the oil industry.
03:56 PM on 11/04/2010
The price of everything will be going up, b/c Ben Bernacke is destroying the value of the dollar with his quantitative easing/money printing. When the dollar goes down, oil always goes up. Bernacke announced yesterday that he's going to print $600 billion more--what Goldman Sachs and other banksters asked him to print. That's why the market responded the way it did. He says that it will help tamp down rising unemployment, but that's just BS. All he's doing is helping the banks clean up their still TOXIC and fraud-laden balance sheets.
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01:56 PM on 11/04/2010
The hedge fund ferrets have been waiting and rubbing their palms together, just look at the price of crude oil and then brace yourself, because something wicked this way comes..............
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Davest
6' 9" with the afro......
03:15 PM on 11/04/2010
we just had 2 wells drilled this year. Get ready is right, the country is getting ready to have the rest of it's resources squeezed out of it.

I'm kind of torn, on one hand, the country is going to get hosed. On the other hand, I'm going to reap the benefits of all the clueless people that voted Republican.
12:57 PM on 11/04/2010
the republican party has an extremely poor record of creating a thriving domestic economy and the broader job market which has persisted for 40 years. If they did something different regarding that, that would be a change .. I am not holding my breath. The dems have failed to do the right thing, now they have the republican party to help them continue to fail to do the right thing.
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dragonladywaltham
politicians are SUPPOSED to serve Americans
11:13 PM on 11/06/2010
It took more than 18 months to cause it and you expect an obstructive just say "no" congress to fix it "likaty split" We need a better education system for Americans.
11:35 AM on 11/04/2010
Where are the jobs ..GOP..?
12:50 PM on 11/04/2010
war. It serves the service based economy and is called military service.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RonNYC
Ecommerce Professional
03:43 PM on 11/05/2010
You mean tax cuts for the very, very rich, don't you?
outnow
Ban the bomb
11:32 AM on 11/04/2010
The people are beginning to understand that both parties have the same agenda on Wall Street. This is not yet discussed in the MSM because the MSM is so CORPORATE.

The recent run of the GOP will sputter if there is an alternative. I am planning on the Coffee Party as a Populist alternative to the Tea Party.

Democrats and Republicans both have their hands too far in the till. Corruption works to certain point and then the mordida is too high to efficiently "grease the wheels." The real economy is going down in flames because consumers have less real wages and have run out of credit. This is a "game over" moment and those stealing can no longer be controlled as they, not the People, essentially control BOTH parties.

There is little to be done but to assume that things will be bad for a decade or more. If prosecutions and civil suits are not used to clean up the corruption, there will not be a future except for those who stole the most - but only if they get rid of most of us.

Restore Glass-Steagall and outlaw derivatives, audit the FED, etc. Neither party will ever allow this to happen. So new parties must emerge.
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Wolfman von
Radio dj XtremeWolfRadio@com
11:29 AM on 11/04/2010
And 2010's Biggest Winner Is…
Dark money, shadowy groups, and secret millionaires.
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10:47 AM on 11/04/2010
"Graduate, remember this one word: derivatives!"
01:17 PM on 11/04/2010
Tell us more. Do you mean buy them or we are in danger from derivatives?
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01:30 PM on 11/04/2010
Yes.
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
10:33 AM on 11/04/2010
More jobs outsourced overseas will help the bottom line of the multinational corporations.......so they are thrilled their stooges in the GOP won.
10:06 AM on 11/04/2010
GM is about to sell $10 Billion worth of Stock !

I suggest that GM take the $10 Billion and reopen a lot of closed plants and start making a whole bunch of products that were off shored again here in AMERICA.

Put America back to WORK !
12:51 PM on 11/04/2010
they are busy opening plants in russia and/or china.
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je7374
Restore Unions and Restore the future
07:33 PM on 11/05/2010
I work at Ford and was soundly criticized last October for voting down yet another concession contract, even though we passed one last March. 30 days after that contract passed Ford announced the building of their new diesel engine...in Mexico.
senseandnonsense
Trapeze artist
09:25 AM on 11/04/2010
Who cares? If the companies are outsourcing and no one has a job, who cares what the stock market is doing?
02:34 PM on 11/04/2010
If more people invested in the stock market when times are good, then they wouldn't have to rely on a job for financial security when times are lean. Real freedom is *not* being beholden to corporations for a job.
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Soundofthunder
Listen to the thunder
03:45 PM on 11/04/2010
That doesn't work if the market tanks. Then you're jobless AND holding the bag on a bunch of devalued assets. Best advice is to climb out of the wo mb of a rich lady. Then you're set for life.

S
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PWM
Eisenhower Rep. The 1% started class warfare.
05:09 PM on 11/04/2010
The markets run on bubbles, for everyone who makes a buck hundreds end up ruined.
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usna73
We are all in this together
09:15 AM on 11/04/2010
In all likelihood we will be left with gridlock after the comments about working together are over.

My view is that while gridlock is seen historically as a plus for the markets, it's different this time.

The domestic economy faces numerous challenges to growth -- in the form of an overleveraged consumer, still-elevated joblessness and large fiscal imbalances (local, state and federal) -- that need to be addressed posthaste.

Indeed, the current anemic trajectory of growth exposes the economy to policy mistakes, a further drop in consumer and business confidence and other unknown and exogenous factors (such as geopolitical risk).

Stated simply, a government divided is not a price/earnings-expanding event, nor is it a recipe for a new leg of a bull market.