Unless you were sitting under a rock somewhere, you know that the potential impeachment of President Donald Trump dominated the news last week, kind of like the New England Patriots and football. That’s likely to continue for a while. Anyway, while the House of Representatives might indeed approve articles of impeachment against him, investors need to focus on the fact that there remains little support among Senate Republicans to convict him.
For those of you who don’t remember your high school civics class, the effect of impeachment alone is limited. An impeachment is equivalent to an indictment in criminal law, and only the statement of charges against an official. While a House vote to impeach only requires a majority, which the Democrats have, a conviction in the Senate requires a 2/3rds majority, which the Democrats don’t. It’s far out of reach today.
As noted in the piece by my colleague Tom Lee on page 3, investors need to look more deeply into situations the market is evaluating. And ironically, impeachment may actually help the President next year, as the political conversation ahead of 2020 Federal elections moves from issues such as health insurance, prescription drugs, and climate change to talks between two leaders and whether or not the President may have violated campaign finance rules during the conversation. Remember, the Democrats captured control of the House because of the issues that impact voters, not campaign finance issues.
More fallout from this also hits former Vice President Joseph Biden, who’s been hurt by the talks of the role he played with respect to his son’s activities both in Ukraine and China. The talk of Biden in this negative light could help Senator Elizabeth Warren as she continues to climb in the early polls. And here’s another thing: President Trump has shown he is street brawler who will fight hard to be re-elected.
Trade took second place last week in the market’s sights. For more on this see page 1. China and the U.S. have announced a new round of trade talks in Washington, D.C. to occur October 10-11. The Chinese seemingly have shown goodwill by permitting the purchase of soybeans and pork from the U.S. ahead of the talks. While a big comprehensive deal isn’t in the cards, a smaller agreement could be reached in the coming months. An agreement would likely have Chinese agricultural purchases and the US permitting export licenses to be given to American companies that supply Huawei.
The Congress avoided a federal government shutdown next week by approving a Continuing Resolution postponing spending decisions to Nov. 19. Kick the can down the road.
Figure: Top Trump Tweets