当社の個人情報保護方針&クッキーポリシー
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個人情報保護方針(25 August 2020) With the US presidential election less than three months away, an interesting finding published back in 1967 by stock market research Yale Hirsh in the Stock Trader's Almanac presents a distracting tidbit for data lovers and market watchers alike: stock market performance is interconnected with electoral cycles. Hirsh's "Presidential Election Cycle Theory" decomposes US presidential terms by year to show that year three of a US president's 4-year term is usually the strongest year for the market.
This 60 year old tidbit has still more to offer. When you consider whether the incumbent party won or lost as well as whether the president is in his first or second term in office, you'll understand why if the S&P 500 had a vote, it would be for incumbent Donald Trump. And, if the theory were to hold, the reward would be higher returns over the period from 1 November 2020 to 31 October 2021* as the world prepared for the Trump's second term.
Stay tuned! Coming up next in our US election coverage we'll go beyond the headlines of market fluctuations and elections to present data to help evaluate relationships between economic performance and electoral cycles.
* For simplicity, 1 November is used as the proxy for the US general election voting day. Percent changes are calculated from 1 November.
** Data is incomplete for the 4-years of the Trump Administration and will be updated as the end of the term approaches.
(28 July 2020) The US general election is scheduled for November 3, 2020. It will result the election of either former Vice President Joe Biden as the 46th president of the United States or the re-election of incumbent US President Donald Trump for a second term. Polling data from RealClearPolitics shows that during July President Trump reduced the polling gap to strengthen his position against Biden. According to the latest RealClearPolitics poll, 49.6% of respondents support Biden, 40.9% support Trump - an 8.67 percentage point gap. In June, according to the same polling...
Among the most pressing issues for the 2020 US presidential elections are healthcare, terrorism, gun policy, education, and the economy, according to an early 2020 Gallup survey. Around one third of American adults cited candidates' positions on these issues as 'extremely important' to their vote for president come November. While COVID and the health, employment, and general economic and social crises that have ensued this year have almost certainly changed the weight and perspective people may place on any one of these topics, as a collective, they are representative fo the...
(16 July 2020) In June 2020, the number of new COVID-19 cases reported daily in the United States was on the rise, surpassing previous peak figures in many states and triggering an increasing death toll in at least 10 states. Looking ahead to the November US presidential election, to avoid the possible COVID-19 health risks associated with large crowds at polling places, many states are preparing for an increase in vote-by-mail, leading us to wonder whether the US president elected in 2020 will become the first president elected mostly by mail. According to data from the midterm...
(29 October 2020) If you've been following the latest forecasts from The Economist and Columbia University, Donald Trump has a small probability (3.5%) of winning the electoral college to be re-elected in November. The model is designed to predict the chances of winning the electoral-college on election day, as Trump did in 2016 even though he failed to win the popular vote, and currently gives Joe Biden an 96 percent probability of defeating Donald Trump and better than 19 in 20 chances of winning the popular vote. Reliability of polling data doesn't stop the polling and it's...
当社のウェブサイトではクッキーを使用し、ユーザー様のオンライン体験を向上させております。このウェブサイトを立ち上げたときに、クッキーはお使いのコンピュータ上に配置されます。インターネットブラウザの設定を通して、個人的なクッキーの設定を変更できます。
個人情報保護方針