Here’s how to play the 3 big uncertainties hanging over the market, according to one hedge fund

So, you may have heard there is an electoral contest in the world’s largest economy.

But the coming U.S. presidential election isn’t the only major uncertainty hanging over the world’s financial markets. Savvas Savouri, chief economist at U.K. hedge fund Toscafund Asset Management, says there are three major events due to be resolved imminently, the other two being the European Union-U.K. trade negotiations, and the U.S.-China currency trade tensions.

Savouri doesn’t hold any doubt that former Vice President Joe Biden will win. Where he differs in view from others is the socially radical turn he thinks the U.S. government will take. “At 77, Biden may see out one term, but cannot reasonably expect a second. His first and only term then will be one where the free radicals within the Democratic Party face off its long stable order; and we have all been taught that free radicals are ‘unstable molecules.’ Those then looking for plus ça change should bear this in mind,” he says. The congressional onslaught, as he calls it, will result in pushes for antitrust breakups, greater regulation, and higher corporate taxation.

Savouri expects gains for gold GCZ0, commodities, and domestic staples if Biden wins, and losses for the dollar DXY, Treasurys, and technology companies, real-estate investment trusts and cyclicals. He expects the same moves for a President Donald Trump victory, except that the tech sector would continue to rise.

A “peaceful” resolution on Brexit also will make its mark on financial markets. “With Brexit finally resolved peacefully — as I have always been convinced it would be, though at the very last moment — the pound cannot fail to gap-up to its fair value,” he says. He says that means the pound GBPUSD spiking up, possibly beyond €1.30 and $1.60. That rise shouldn’t be viewed as a negative competitive shock, but as a signal for a wave of risk-averse international capital to flow back into the U.K., he says.

He expects the third game-changer to be resolved by China opting to let the yuan USDCNY move more freely. “The coronavirus crisis has compromised the internal markets on either side of the North Atlantic to such extents that it has shone a very strong light in Beijing on the importance of strength in the domestic Chinese economy. On top of this, the Old World’s manic debt printing — adding to the debt created over the last decade and more — has made it all the clearer to those wielding power in Beijing that they have by far the strongest fiscal and monetary hand to show of anywhere on Earth, and a currency to boot,” he says. He dryly put “bunkers” in New Zealand and “tinned food” as assets to buy if China doesn’t revalue.

“We are fast approaching culmination of the three bouts, the results of which are only still being guessed at, and whose culmination, whatever their results, will markedly shift the tectonic plates on which all asset prices are ultimately determined: exchange rates,” he says.

This article originally appeared on MarketWatch.

Popular

More Articles

Popular