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FinanceU.S. Presidential Election

Dow futures soar more than 900 points as Trump closes in on victory and GOP flips Senate

Jason Ma
By
Jason Ma
Jason Ma
Weekend Editor
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Jason Ma
By
Jason Ma
Jason Ma
Weekend Editor
Down Arrow Button Icon
November 6, 2024, 2:53 AM ET
Former President Donald Trump
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

U.S. stock futures rallied sharply early Wednesday as results from the presidential election pointed to a likely win for Donald Trump and Republican control of the Senate.

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Reliably Republican and Democratic states have fallen into Trump’s and Kamala Harris’s columns. But top swing states Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia were called for Trump, putting him on the cusp of victory. Prediction markets are already pricing nearly 100% odds of a Trump win.

Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 956 points, or 2.2%, the S&P 500 gained 1.9%, and the Nasdaq added 1.7%.

The so-called Trump trade rebounded after retreating Tuesday and Monday. The greenback rose, with the U.S. Dollar Index up 1.5%. The 10-year Treasury yield jumped 10 basis points to 4.38%, and Bitcoin surged 6% to $73,730 after briefly hitting $75,000.

Those assets have followed Trump’s political prospects because his tariffs, tax cuts, and immigration crackdown are seen as inflationary, limiting the Federal Reserve’s ability to lower rates further, while he has also rebranded himself as a champion of the crypto sector.

Meanwhile, shares of Trump Media and Technology soared 10% in after-hours trading after closing lower in the regular session amid volatile trading. Tesla climbed 3.5% as CEO Elon Musk has been a top Trump backer, while solar stocks fell as renewable energy stocks could see a rollback of climate initiatives.

Overseas markets eyed the U.S. election’s final hours cautiously as the next president could have a major impact on the global economy, particularly on trade. Trump has vowed to hike tariffs across the board, with duties on China especially poised to soar. And on Monday, he threatened to impose a 25% tariff on imports from Mexico unless it closed its border with the U.S.—and boost it as high as 100% if it didn’t comply.

In China, Shanghai’s SSE Composite Index was down 0.1%. In Japan, the Nikkei 225 jumped 2.6% as the yen tumbled against the dollar, making its exports cheaper. Earlier in Europe, the Stoxx 50 ticked up 0.4% while the Stoxx Europe 600 eked out a gain of less than 0.1%.

Other races are critical too, as the party that controls Congress will also determine how much leeway the next president has to enact policies. Republicans have flipped the Senate, while the outcome for the House remains unclear. Separately, the Fed wraps up its policy meeting on Thursday, with rates expected to come down 25 basis points.

Trump economy vs. Harris economy

Under another Trump administration, investors expect less regulation from the federal government. That should boost bank stocks, cryptocurrencies and crypto stocks like Coinbase, as well as companies in the oil and gas sector.

He has also threatened to roll back President Joe Biden’s signature policies, including those that encourage renewable energy and electric vehicles. Trump’s promise to curb immigration and launch a mass deportation campaign has also lifted shares of prison operators Geo Group and CoreCivic.

A Harris administration is largely seen providing more continuity with Biden’s, maintaining policies promoting green energy and infrastructure. She has also unveiled plans to encourage more housing supply, potentially benefiting homebuilder stocks.

Their differing positions on taxes will also affect corporate earnings, personal income, and stocks. Trump has promised to extend tax cuts from his first term and bring the corporate rate even lower. He has also teased a slew of eliminations, including taxes on tips, overtime pay, and Social Security payments, as well as exemptions for the military, veterans, and first responders. He has even flirted with eliminating income taxes altogether. 

Harris has backed extending Trump tax cuts for Americans earning less than $400,000, but not for the richest. She also has pledged to lift the corporate rate and to force the wealthy to pay taxes on unrealized capital gains, while expanding child tax credits and giving tax breaks for small businesses.

Next president faces massive U.S. debt

Whoever the next president will be, he or she will likely face a reckoning on the soaring U.S. debt and deficits.

But that may come sooner under a Trump administration. Budget watchdogs have warned on the exploding federal deficit. While it will expand under either Trump or Harris, the Penn Wharton Budget Model and the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget have said Trump’s policies would produce a much deeper hole. Trump ally Elon Musk has said he can cut federal spending by $2 trillion, but skeptics note that’s unlikely without gutting entitlements and the military or wrecking the economy.

Neither candidate made deficit reduction a priority during the campaign, but financial markets may force the issue. “Bond vigilantes,” or investors who protest massive deficits by selling off bonds to push yields higher, are already weighing in on the election, according to Ed Yardeni, the Wall Street veteran who coined the term in the 1980s.

As the Treasury Department auctions greater volumes of debt to finance the federal government’s ocean of red ink, bond investors may balk, sending rates higher and raising borrowing costs across key segments of the economy, like mortgage rates.

“The Bond Vigilantes may also be voting against Washington, figuring that no matter which party wins the White House and the Congress, fiscal policies will bloat the already bloated federal government budget deficit and heat up inflation,” Yardeni and colleague Eric Wallerstein wrote last month. “The next administration will face net interest outlays of over $1 trillion on the ballooning federal debt.”

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About the Author
Jason Ma
By Jason MaWeekend Editor

Jason Ma is the weekend editor at Fortune, where he covers markets, the economy, finance, and housing.

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