The last time this happened, voters didnāt credit Bill Clinton. That may be a bad omen, or a good one.
If the stock market chose presidents, Joe Biden would be a shoo-in for reelection in 2024. The market rallied this month amid growing optimism about the economy, with the S&P 500 zooming 1.9 percent Tuesday on news that the consumer price index rose only 3.2 percent in October (compared to 3.7 percent in September). Stocks rallied again Wednesday on news that the producer price index fell 0.5 percent. Commentators are no longer debating whether the economy will experience a āsoft landingā (i.e., a reduction in inflation without recession). The only question now is when it will arrive. The S&P 500 seems to have decided itās already here.
But the stock market doesnāt choose presidents. Voters do, and polls continue to show they think the economy is in terrible shape. A Financial TimesāMichigan Ross Nationwide Survey conducted November 2ā7 is absolutely brutal on this point.
The āsoft landingā narrative is settled? Thatās news to me! There were a number of things that people could point at before 2008 about how peachy the economy wasā¦ until it suddenly wasnāt. I would be interested in hearing what specifically Biden did to create this āsoft landingā but in general presidents donāt actually have that kind of control, and tying your name to the market makes you more susceptible to its fickle nature. The numbers were doing well for Trump, and he wouldnāt shut up about how he supposedly achieved it, until covid smacked it all down.
Market is holding on for dear life, banks getting bailou- I mean emergency loans. Bond markets are shit, itās all just show. China has been collapsing too ever since evergrande went bankrupt in like 2021.
And it all started when they shot that damn gorillaā¦ drags cigarette
Iām in Cincinnati with my dick out.
one true patriot
He turned the economy dial to ābetterā. Now if only he turned his gas dial to ācheaperā./s