Spooked markets "It's hard to remember the last time Wall Street was as repelled by a presidential candidate as it is by John Kerry," writes Stephen Moore in National Review. "Many stock analysts are convinced that the mere threat of a Kerry presidency has caused equity values to slump in the past two months," said Mr. Moore, president of the Club for Growth and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute. " 'No one wants to make major investments in the wake of a presidential candidate whose economic agenda would substantially raise taxes on investment and thus substantially raise the cost of capital in America,' says investment specialist Robert Grusky of New Mountain Capital. "What Grusky is referring to here is the Kerry-Edwards risk factor. Efficient markets trade ahead of anticipated policy developments. A new analysis by Eric Engen, an economist at the American Enterprise Institute, finds that over the past several months there has been an inverse relationship between Kerry's poll numbers and the direction of the S&P 500. 'The evidence suggests that when Sen. Kerry's political fortunes rise, the stock market tanks.' "What do investors find so repugnant about Kerry-Edwards? In the past, the stock market has not performed, on average, much differently in Democratic and Republican administrations. What seems to have the markets especially spooked about this Democratic ticket is that it has embraced what I call the three terrible T's: tariffs, taxes and trial lawyers," Mr. Moore said. |