The Trump negativity in the media is getting really old imo - it seems determined to withhold from him a fair chance to prove himself, so here's a positive snippet from an investment publication. It doesn't try to speculate on the long term impact of a new administration, but it does show that the initial investor hysteria in the UK was short-lived:
Quote:
I suggested in my last column before the US election that any immediate stock market reaction to the result, whichever way it went, would be short-lived, just as the impact of the Brexit vote was. However, I could not have envisaged just how short the blink of an eye could be. The FTSE 100 index dropped 100 points as Donald Trump’s victory was confirmed just before the London opening. Within one hour that loss had been wiped out.
The lesson for small investors is not to get sucked into a panic in the first few minutes of trading. Leave that to the day traders, who thrive on this sort of reaction.
For the longer term, the election at least frees the deadlock caused by having a Democrat president and a Republican Congress. Although President Trump will probably be a lot less wild than Candidate Trump, I am sure there will be some tax cuts and some extra government spending, with the bill to be picked up later. That will help to get the economy moving despite a quarter point rise in interest rates next month.
For investors, life goes on as usual with the proviso that we could at last see bond prices start to fall and bond yields edge higher. For long term investors, there is every reason to stick with stocks. Unquote
BTW If Trump had lost and his supporters had reacted to the defeat in the same way that left-leaning celebs, politicians and media are presently doing (the petition to the Electoral College, inflammatory tweets and speeches etc) do you think the Democrats would have complained and said something like "stop whining?" So much for accepting a democratic defeat graciously and bringing Americans together again!