Why Poor Presidential Approval Ratings Make for Great Stock Markets

By Keith Fitz-Gerald

Related Articles

No question, President George Bush’s approval ratings have pulled an “Enron.”

A recent Associated Press-Ipsos poll conducted June 12-16 showed only 29% of the public gave Bush a favorable rating. It’s the least favorable approval rating for a U.S. president since Jimmy Carter’s approval rating dropped to just 22%.

While that lousy view of the job Bush is doing will help set up a more-contentious election in November, here’s a curious fact that investors will find quite rewarding: The key to better stock-market returns isn’t having a president we “love” - it’s having a president that we don’t quite hate.

Let me explain.

According to a study of presidential approval ratings by Ned Davis Research that looks back all the way to the days of President John F. Kennedy, when the president’s approval rating is below 35%, as it is now, the Dow Jones Industrial Average Index loses an average of 5.9% per year. When times are good and presidential approval ratings exceed 65%, the Dow rises at an annualized rate of 2.6%. But when just 50%-65% of the public gives a favorable rating, the markets do a bit better and the Dow rises at a 5.4% annualized clip. [Click here for the full chart on how the Dow has performed during different presidential administrations.]

Now here’s the really interesting part.

When the majority of Americans disapprove of how the president’s doing his job, and the approval rating clocks in between 35%-50%, the Dow posts an average annualized gain of 12.3%. In other words, when less than half the population has a favorable view of a sitting president’s performance, the Dow’s upside potential improves by 127.78%.

Talk about a counter-intuitive result!

For next year, then, it seems that the key isn’t for us to elect a president that everybody likes; instead, the country needs to elect a president that the masses “hate” a bit less than they dislike Bush and who only does his job well enough to garner the support of between 35% and 50% of the population.

Anything worse, and the Dow could fall, which given “The Dubya’s” current lackluster rating, is right on track for how the markets are behaving lately.

And that has us thinking: Who amongst the presidential contenders that are left do we like the least?

Source: Why Poor Presidential Approval Ratings Make for Great Stock Markets

Liked this article from Money Morning? You can receive the same great commentary and insights directly to your email box when you claim your free subscription to the Money Morning eletter service. Simply fill in your email address below and hit 'subscribe'.

Subscribe

NO-SPAM PLEDGE: We will NEVER rent, sell, or give away your e-mail address to anyone for any reason. You can unsubscribe from Money Morning with a few clicks.

Related Articles

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

About the Author

Keith Fitz-GeraldKeith Fitz-Gerald is a Contributing Editor to Money Morning, as well as Investment Director of the Money Map Report and editor of the New China Trader. He is also a seasoned market analyst known for his accuracy, perspective and insight. He is also a former professional trader and licensed CTA advising institutions and qualified individuals, and he specializes in non-directional trading.

See All Posts by This Author



We’re in the midst of the greatest investing boom in almost 60 years -- a boom that's not about to end anytime soon. Money Morning helps you profit from this seismic shift in the global economy with ahead-of-the-curve reports on China, Japan and other investing hot spots.

See All Posts from This Publication

Post a Response



Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Receive These Valuable Investing Strategy Resources to Your Inbox Courtesy of Contrarian Profits

    Subscribe
We respect your privacy.
Choose any of the FREE subscription services below that you'd like to receive, enter your email address, and click 'subscribe'.
Contrarian Profits

The Daily Reckoning



Select Edition:
Penny Sleuth

Money Morning

Investor's Daily Edge

Money Morning UK

Investment U

Whiskey and Gunpowder

Taipan Daily

Offshore A-Letter

Today's Financial News

The Smart Profits Report

Casey Research