How will the S&P 500 react to the 2024 election?
➕
Plus
66
Ṁ10k
resolved Nov 6
100%92%
Trump wins, S&P increases
1.2%
Harris wins, S&P increases
1.5%
Harris wins, S&P decreases
6%
Trump wins, S&P decreases

This market considers the election result and the change in the price of the S&P 500 between its close on Monday, November 4th 2024 to the time the race is called by AP.

Please suggest the best source to find stock data by the minute in case it's close and the election is called while the stock market is open.

How this would've resolved in

2020: Biden, S&P increases ($3,310.24 to $3,583.04)

2016: Trump, S&P 500 increases ($2,131.52 to $2,131.56)

2012: Obama, S&P 500 increases ($1,417.26 to $1,428.27)

2008: Obama, S&P 500 increases ($966.30 to $1,001.84)

2004: Bush, S&P 500 increases ($1,130.51 to $1,130.54)

2000: Bush, S&P 500 decreases ($1,432.19 to ~$1375 when Supreme Court decided/Gore conceded)

Quick check assuming election was called Tuesday night/Wednesday morning

1996: Clinton, up

1992: Clinton, down

1988: Bush, up

1984: Reagan, up

1980: Reagan, up

Get
Ṁ1,000
and
S3.00
Sort by:

These are no change not up

2016: Trump, S&P 500 increases ($2,131.52 to $2,131.56)

2004: Bush, S&P 500 increases ($1,130.51 to $1,130.54)


bought Ṁ500 Trump wins, S&P incr... YES

@PriitKallas didn't want to add more than 4 options

Nothing. Ever. Happens.

What would an Election Unaware model that just samples from the distribution of weekly returns (%) for the last year say?

Then I guess modify play around with this simulation until you can create some plausible story of how the election shifts the election unaware baseline.

https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/p-hacking/

It's fascinating that no matter what, it will likely go up. Shouldn't that somehow be priced in?

@MagnusAnderson There are actually more than two scenarios (Trump wins, Harris wins).

  • Republican sweep

  • Trump wins, split congress

  • Harris wins, split congress

  • Dem sweep

I would expect R sweep to be the best and D sweep to be the worst. The intermediate outcomes can actually both have positive returns

© Manifold Markets, Inc.Terms + Mana-only TermsPrivacyRules