After a brief period of not being the worst stock market in the world, the US has reclaimed the bottom spot, with a year-to-date loss of -6.1%, vs. -2.4% for EAFE, the best measure of the performance of non-US markets. The Russell 2000 index of mid-cap, US economy-centric stocks is only down by about -1% ytd, however, outpacing the S&P 500, EAFE and NASDAQ. I think this is more a result of years of the Russell underperforming the rest of the market than any special merit in holding domestic mid-caps. Sort of a variation on you can’t fall off the floor.
The new negative issue for US stocks, as I see it, is not just the attack on Iran, right or wrong, but the shocking botch that the administration has made of it. This stands in stark contrast with the success of the much smaller-scale raid on Venezuela.
How so? Paul Krugman observes that Secretary Hegseth seems to have a sharp distaste both for subordinates who are smarter than he is and/or who are women, and has been eliminating both from his inner circle, or from the DoD entirely. Therefore, the military isn’t nearly as intelligent as it has usually been. Maybe that’s the problem. I’m stunned that no one in authority seems to have checked to see whether we had enough anti-drone ammunition before starting the attack (Hegseth implies as much by blaming the apparent shortfall that has quickly developed on Joe Biden). I also imagine that if anyone in the administration thought that Iran would do the obvious by closing the Straits of Hormuz, Washington would have filled the Strategic Oil Reserve before commencing its attack.
Even before Iran, the administration had put in place an economic policy that seeks to spur economic growth through the curious (deeply unsound might be a better word) plan of shrinking the workforce through ICE arrests and deportations, while also lowering the skill level of American workers by attacking higher education. For investors, this has meant reimagining the US stock market as a barbell of third-world style export-oriented manufacturing on one side, and multinational technology innovators based in the US but who could relocate at the drop of a hat.
As a result of these odd administration actions, for the moment, at least, the US seems to be striking both foreign- and domestic-based investors as less the land of the free and more a rudderless rogue state.
The obvious move is to tilt holdings away from Wall Street to other markets.