Two weeks before Election Day 2020, Donald Trump and Joe Biden met for their final debate, and as regular readers might recall, the incumbent president made a bold prediction. “If he’s elected, the stock market will crash,” the Republican claimed, pointing at his Democratic rival.
Americans elected Biden soon after. The stock market, at least for now, has not crashed. In fact, the Wall Street Journal reported in April that Wall Street was off to its best start to a presidential term since the Great Depression. Fortunately for investors, the growth has continued. The Journal added yesterday:
The [Standard and Poor’s] 500 and Nasdaq Composite extended their record-setting streaks on Thursday, while investors digested the Federal Reserve’s latest update on stimulus spending and interest rates…. It was the sixth consecutive record close for both indexes.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average reached a record high this morning, fueled in part by the excellent jobs report.
Circling back to our earlier coverage, at a certain level, none of this should come as too big of a surprise. As the nation crawls out of its pandemic-generated hole, it stands to reason that Wall Street would respond positively.
What’s more, any such analysis should come with all kinds of caveats, starting with the most important: The major stock market indexes are not the economy and do not always reflect economic health.
The major indexes’ record highs nevertheless stand out, in large part because this is likely the one part of Biden’s record that frustrates Trump the most.








