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Answers & Observations

Stay up to date with the latest personal finance developments, financial planning advice, investment news and retirement planning tips from our team of certified financial planners and experienced wealth advisors here in New York City.

Posts tagged Presidential Election
The State of Our “Union” after a Bruising Election, Year & Decade

We expect stocks to be volatile over the next 12 months as vaccine news develops — optimism over vaccine announcement buoys it, and pessimism about vaccine efficacy drags it. That will be uncomfortable, but in general, we expect stocks to be higher a year from now. By then, we’ll likely have taken tangible steps to recover from the pandemic, the economy will start to recover slowly, and earnings will rise as a result.

We’re starting to scale cash reserves back into stocks, and we’ll continue to do this through December and January. The only caveat is that if a client needs money for a house reconstruction or a big purchase of some kind, we’re keeping that in cash, not putting it in stocks.

But good news for the stock market is not good news for average Americans. There are still 10 million fewer Americans working today than in January of this year. The U.S. response to the pandemic is the still worst in the world. Daily mortality is up 75% over the last month to 2,000/day, and it will continue to soar through Thanksgiving, into Christmas, because the infection rate is triple what it was back in June.

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Trump v. Biden: Final Observations Heading Into Election Day (Week, Month)

We’re cautiously optimistic that Joseph Biden beats Donald Trump, but we won’t know for sure until early in the morning on November 4th, possibly not until later in November or even early December if the election results are a lot closer than we expect.

Here are the critical elements we are watching leading into Tuesday, November 3rd.

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Confounding All Expectations, Donald J. Trump Elected US President

FiveThirtyEight.com was the most conservative, forecasting an electoral split of 272-268 in favor of Clinton with a 66% probability of success.  The mood among Republican operatives, even the candidate himself, was despondent.  No candidate in modern electoral history who polled so badly post Labor Day had ever won.

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Can Trump Win the Presidency (and What Would That Mean for Stocks?)

After 11 Republican, 6 Democratic debates, caucuses and primaries in 18 states, the delegate count for Republicans and Democrats is as follows: Trump 329 (1,237 needed to win nomination), Cruz 231, Rubio 110, Kasich 25, Clinton 1058 (including 458 super delegates, 2,383 needed to win nomination), Sanders 431 (including 22 super delegates).

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