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Writer's pictureRobin Powell

What does victory for Macron mean for stocks?

Updated: Nov 14





By ROBIN POWELL


So, Emmanuel Macron has won the French election, becoming the first sitting president in 20 years to be re-elected.


Of course we all have our personal political views, and there was certainly a collective “Dieu merci!” in the Powell household as the news from Paris came in. But to what extent should we let the way we vote influence the way we invest?


The answer is, we shouldn’t allow our politics and our investments to mix at all. Why not? Because the future is very hard to predict — and that includes election and referendum results. And even if we knew the results in advance, predicting how the financial markets will react to them can be just as challenging.


How many people, for example, confidently predicted the Brexit vote and the election of Donald Trump in 2016, the fact that, contrary to the view of almost every forecaster, equity markets would respond positively in each case?


Will Macron be better for the French economy than Marine Le Pen would have been? Maybe, or maybe not. And although the consensus is that Macron’s victory is a positive development for the EU, who knows? The fate of the EU could be decided by events completely out of M Macron’s control. The French press will be full of articles in the coming days on what Macron's victory means. What it specifically means for stocks, nobody knows.  


The next big political event of the year is the Australian election on 21st May. It pits a centre-right Liberal-National Coalition government, in power for nearly a decade, against a centre-left Labor Party, as well a rising tide of independents and the Greens.


If you listen to the major party leaders, the fortunes of the economy and markets are hanging on the result. But there really is very little evidence that markets care one way or the other about Australian election outcomes.


Of course, reasonable people can legitimately disagree about particular issues and what the priorities for the country should be. But it can be a mistake to mix your party affiliation and voting intentions with your investment choices.


As investment bank UBS pointed out in a research note recently, the economic policy differences between the two major parties are rarely significant, but even less so at this election than in the last election, in May 2019. In that election tax issues dominated the campaign.


Rising inflation is more of an issue this time, but that is a challenge for whomever wins. In any case, the market has already priced in a series of increases in official interest rates, starting most probably from the Reserve Bank’s meeting in early June.


In his own analysis, economist Shane Oliver of AMP has said there is no clear evidence that election uncertainty affects economic growth in election years. Neither is there any evidence that victory by one major party or the other on its own is better for shares.


While shares have returned 13% per annum under Coalition governments as opposed to 10% under Labor governments, that has to be set against the fact that both the Whitlam government of the 1970s and Rudd/Gillard government of 2007-2013 governed at times of severe downturns in global equity markets, Oliver says.


Ultimately, he says the fortunes of Australia, a small and open economy, are driven by international forces, such as global interest rates, commodity prices and the rise and fall in demand among its major trading partners.


“Once in government, political parties are usually forced to adopt sensible policies if they wish to ensure rising living standards and arguably there has been broad consensus in recent decades regarding key macro-economic fundamentals,” Oliver says. “So ultimately economic and interest rate cycles have a dominant impact on investment markets rather than specific policies under each government.”


The danger of mixing your political opinions with your investments has been pointed out repeatedly by US blogger Barry Ritholtz, who says many pundits give politicians too much credit for economic and market outcomes. They confuse cause and effect and attribute to the actions of individuals what are really larger economic forces.


From Pearl Harbour to the Cuban missile crisis to assassinations, Watergate and Nixon’s resignation and all the way to 9/11 and Trump, markets have ultimately taken most of their long-term direction from corporate earnings, cashflows and valuations.


“When you are in the polling booth, vote however you like,” Ritholtz, a professed independent, has said on many occasions. “But when you are reviewing your investing options, it is best to do so with a cold, dispassionate eye.”


And keep in mind that Ritholtz is talking about the world’s most powerful economy and biggest financial markets. If that is the case, why would financial markets spend much time worrying about an election in Australia, whose economy ranks 13 by nominal GDP and whose share market represents about 2% of global market capitalisation?


As citizens of a democracy, we all have a genuine interest in election outcomes and a responsibility to exercise our choices.


And there may be genuine differences among the parties on particular issues that influence us one way or another – whether it be about economic management or climate change or health and education or foreign affairs and defence.


But amid the noise of a campaign and the often exaggerated claims of one side or the other, it can be a mistake to let our emotional responses as citizens influence our portfolios. Ultimately, as investors, we need to put aside our ideological biases and think beyond election day.




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