The volatility market is ready for “too close to the call” runoff

Raphael Warnock, center, and Jon Ossoff attend a rally in Garden City, Georgia, Dec. 19.

Photographer: Colin Douglas Gray / Bloomberg

Investors are not yet ready to leave behind this chaotic year. There is a more persistent risk event: the last races of the 2020 elections that have been extended to next year.

While not as pronounced as the coverage seen during election day last month, options and volatility futures show high concern about potential market turmoil resulting from January 2 race results. in Georgia who will determine whether Republicans retain control of the Senate.

Prior to the November vote, many saw the democratic balance of the election as one of the most bullish results possible for U.S. stocks. However, since then, the market has shown that it has become comfortable with a potential continued shared control of the government, a backdrop that has historically produced strong returns.

“There’s no doubt, if you go from red to blue, you’ll have to appreciate something that seems less favorable because markets like blockchain and markets that enjoy the status quo,” said Phil Camporeale, CEO of multi-asset solutions for JPMorgan Asset Management.

The focus on runoff – and the demand for coverage to protect itself from the aftermath of the turmoil – focuses on uncertainty about how investors should position themselves exactly ahead of Joe Biden’s presidency. It needs Democratic control of the Senate to run it on an agenda that will drive green energy companies at the expense of fossil fuel producers, while likely leading to more economic relief packages and infrastructure spending. However, it could also help raise the corporate tax rate and intensify regulatory control.

“It is impossible to overstate the importance of these elections for the size, scale and speed of fiscal, fiscal and regulatory policy of 2021,” Cowen analyst Chris Krueger wrote in a note on December 21st.

Hedges in Place

There are potential winners and losers in both scenarios and it is debatable what would be a better scenario for the overall stock market in the long run. But traders appear to be hedged against the volatility that could erupt in the short term if Georgia’s results cause investors to pile on the perceived beneficiaries of the result and dump the perceived losers.

The coverage probably also reflects the concern that even small surprises could create turmoil in an equity market that needs the general public to continue investing after a spectacular run. The S&P 500 has risen 65% from March lows, with an assortment of valuation metrics at its peak in a decade or more.

“The idea that fiscal policy and public procurement could matter more than revenue and revenue, seems very similar to 2020, right? – is instinctively uncomfortable and supports higher-than-normal volatility that persists,” wrote Julian Emanual, strategist in BTIG brokerage stocks, in a recent note.

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