Recessions create reelection losers

Bill

Malarkeyville
He took cred when it went up, is he taking any cred nowcrybaby drumpf.jpg??:laugh::laugh::laugh:



Fears over a potential recession and plunging stock markets fueled by the coronavirus pandemic could threaten President Trump’s efforts to secure a second term.

As it turns out, the U.S. economy has an impressive track record of predicting the next president, if history is any indication.

The U.S. economy predicted the winner of 16 of the previous 18 elections where a sitting president was up for re-election, according to LPL Financial. You have to reach back to Calvin Coolidge in 1924 to find the last time the economy was wrong regarding the re-election of a president.

“Incredibly, the last 11 times there wasn’t a recession within two years of a re-election, the sitting president won,” Ryan Detrick, senior market strategist at LPL Financial, said in a note. “Compare that to the seven times there was a recession, and the incumbent president didn’t get re-elected five of those times.

To be sure, the economy doesn’t appear to be in a recession. In fact, the U.S. economy headed into 2020 on a solid footing, driven by strong jobs growth, robust consumer spending and a firming housing market.

But stocks ended the longest-ever bull market Thursday as disruptions due to the coronavirus have rippled through the global economy. Bear markets and recessions typically go together, but not always. Stocks have dropped 37% on average in bear markets during a recession, while losing 24% when a downturn is avoided, according to Detrick.

Still, warning signs of a U.S. economic slowdown have emerged, raising fears the decade-long economic expansion could be on its last legs.

That has pushed economists to lower their growth estimates for 2020. Oxford Economics plans to cut its U.S. GDP growth outlook for the year to 0.8%, below its previous forecast of 1.3%, citing the stress in financial markets and plunging oil prices.

“The economy is flirting with a recession in the first half of the year,” says Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.

Before the outbreak, the firm projected a 25% chance that the U.S. economy would suffer a downturn. Now the odds of a recession are closer to 50% because economic activity is expected to contract sharply in the second quarter due to the global supply chain constraints from the virus, Daco says.

U.S. economic activity is poised to gradually rebound in the second half of the year from potential fiscal policy measures from the government, low-interest rates and cheaper gasoline prices. But investors are still anxiously awaiting details from the Trump administration on potential aid for the economy.

“The big question now is how quickly can this be contained?," Detrick says. "A coordinated fiscal policy effort is one key part to stabilizing things.”
 
public gets Trump's economy isn't judged down by a pandemic outbreak.
General consenus though is how Trump handles the pandemic will be a voting factor
 
I am seeing a LOT of wishful thinking from the Phony Media, Party of the Jackass and liberal left. Their hopes are that Americans continue to be hurt through the 2020 election season. The top of their ticket appears to be two OLD, WHITE millionaire socialists; one suffering from dementia and the other a severe Marxist loving moron.

Will this sustain itself through the summer months into October? My belief is that it will not. The markets will recover, the economy will boom once again with pent up demand and the Party of the Jackass along with their PRAVDA like operatives in the PHONY media will have to glom onto the next massive NOTHING BURGER.

It is ironic that the Democratic Party of the Jackass is in such dire straights ideologically that they need to wish harm on Americans. This will indeed blow over. The party of the Jackass will be sorry that this could not have happened in July or August. But we are six months away and have plenty of time to recover from this massive hysteria that seems to grip us whenever there is even the slightest possibility of an epidemic.

So for those on the left that are convinced that Trump is going to lose, please, please take my bet:


https://www.justplainpolitics.com/s...berals-are-strongly-encouraged-to-participate
 
public gets Trump's economy isn't judged down by a pandemic outbreak.
General consenus though is how Trump handles the pandemic will be a voting factor

I agree. I don't see how anyone can hold the downturn related to the virus against Trump.

The election will be a referendum on how he has reacted to it, and his leadership.
 
public gets Trump's economy isn't judged down by a pandemic outbreak.
General consenus though is how Trump handles the pandemic will be a voting factor

No?? I think that is wishful thinking, you assume the public loves him as much as you do & is willing to give him a pass @ every turn.

Did you read the article???

Market is down=blame trump, he said it was his market!!!

Businesses closing, ppl laid off, no new jobs etc etc etc=blame trump, he was bragging about "his" economy not long ago...... I can still recall the laughter @ the UN like it was yesterday.........:| Maybe they knew something trump didn't..:dunno:

1622340UFpN9SrW.gif
 
public gets Trump's economy isn't judged down by a pandemic outbreak.
General consenus though is how Trump handles the pandemic will be a voting factor

This pandemic is laying bare just how fragile and shitty Trump's economy has been, particularly since the shitty Russia Tax Cut.

Wasn't the tax cut supposed to lead to at least 3% growth?

The way the Russia Tax Cut was sold, was that it was the sole and only thing that can boost an economy and sustain that growth.

Guess that was a load of bullshit, like everything Conservatives say and believe.
 
This is why the Trumpanzees are screaming about "everyone else" panicking when they're the ones freaking out. They might not read so well, but they can read the writing on the election wall. And it says, in the immortal words of former TX Gov. Perry -- "Adios, motherfucker."
 
He took cred when it went up, is he taking any cred nowView attachment 14622??:laugh::laugh::laugh:



Fears over a potential recession and plunging stock markets fueled by the coronavirus pandemic could threaten President Trump’s efforts to secure a second term.

As it turns out, the U.S. economy has an impressive track record of predicting the next president, if history is any indication.

The U.S. economy predicted the winner of 16 of the previous 18 elections where a sitting president was up for re-election, according to LPL Financial. You have to reach back to Calvin Coolidge in 1924 to find the last time the economy was wrong regarding the re-election of a president.

“Incredibly, the last 11 times there wasn’t a recession within two years of a re-election, the sitting president won,” Ryan Detrick, senior market strategist at LPL Financial, said in a note. “Compare that to the seven times there was a recession, and the incumbent president didn’t get re-elected five of those times.

To be sure, the economy doesn’t appear to be in a recession. In fact, the U.S. economy headed into 2020 on a solid footing, driven by strong jobs growth, robust consumer spending and a firming housing market.

But stocks ended the longest-ever bull market Thursday as disruptions due to the coronavirus have rippled through the global economy. Bear markets and recessions typically go together, but not always. Stocks have dropped 37% on average in bear markets during a recession, while losing 24% when a downturn is avoided, according to Detrick.

Still, warning signs of a U.S. economic slowdown have emerged, raising fears the decade-long economic expansion could be on its last legs.

That has pushed economists to lower their growth estimates for 2020. Oxford Economics plans to cut its U.S. GDP growth outlook for the year to 0.8%, below its previous forecast of 1.3%, citing the stress in financial markets and plunging oil prices.

“The economy is flirting with a recession in the first half of the year,” says Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.

Before the outbreak, the firm projected a 25% chance that the U.S. economy would suffer a downturn. Now the odds of a recession are closer to 50% because economic activity is expected to contract sharply in the second quarter due to the global supply chain constraints from the virus, Daco says.

U.S. economic activity is poised to gradually rebound in the second half of the year from potential fiscal policy measures from the government, low-interest rates and cheaper gasoline prices. But investors are still anxiously awaiting details from the Trump administration on potential aid for the economy.

“The big question now is how quickly can this be contained?," Detrick says. "A coordinated fiscal policy effort is one key part to stabilizing things.”

So suddenly it's no longer Obama's market, huh?
 
This pandemic is laying bare just how fragile and shitty Trump's economy has been, particularly since the shitty Russia Tax Cut.

Wasn't the tax cut supposed to lead to at least 3% growth?

The way the Russia Tax Cut was sold, was that it was the sole and only thing that can boost an economy and sustain that growth.

Guess that was a load of bullshit, like everything Conservatives say and believe.

Guess your claims about coming and looking me in the eye were just a bunch of bullshit like everything else you've said.

Damn, boy, I gave you specific directions and you still weren't man enough to try and do what you said. Guess you realized it wasn't in your best interest to make that kind of mistake.
 
This is why the Trumpanzees are screaming about "everyone else" panicking when they're the ones freaking out. They might not read so well, but they can read the writing on the election wall. And it says, in the immortal words of former TX Gov. Perry -- "Adios, motherfucker."

The GOP is going to get throttled at the polls this November.

They are probably going to lose the Senate...by how many votes is the question.

There are 23 GOP Senators up for re-election this year.

At least 4 of them are in competitive races right now, but that is going to increase as this pandemic gets worse.

The Democrats will probably win the Senate this year, but could they flip 13 GOP seats to gain 60 votes? It's possible.
 
I agree. I don't see how anyone can hold the downturn related to the virus against Trump.

The election will be a referendum on how he has reacted to it, and his leadership.

He’ll be judged on results.

The rest will be forgotten by summer.
 
Well, they said it was a hoax 7 days ago.

Their judgment isn't good.

Unless the mortality takes a *huge jump* lots of people are going to consider it Hoax-ish and I doubt they will blame Trump for it.

And no, it’s not ‘just getting started’ the virus has been in this country since—at least December, and we have a grand total of 60 some deaths from the scary COVID virus.

Explain how that works.
 
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