Key Takeaways

  • The US election is effectively a toss-up. Harris leads in the polls, but Trump has advantages in the Electoral College, higher approval on the economy and polling errors in his favour. Our election scenarios show a 50% chance of either candidate winning. 
  • Harris has set out a more fiscally expansive policy platform than Biden, promising a package of tax credits. But she is also proposing higher corporation tax, and increased regulation on certain business practices. 
  • However, Harris would struggle to implement much of this agenda unless she got a unified Congress. But we think this is unlikely and give it just a 10% probability. 
  • Still, a Harris government with a divided Congress, which we see as a 40% probability, may be able to pass watered-down aspects of her agenda. Republican interest in child tax credit and immigration reform makes bipartisan agreement possible. 
  • We continue to think there are multiple potential versions of a Trump presidency, depending on the congressional outcome and his governing style. Crucially though, much of Trump’s trade agenda can be passed with executive orders. 
  • We assign a 25% probability to trade war, 15% to a market-friendly outcome involving tax cuts and deregulation, and a 10% probability to a potentially volatile scenario involving tax cuts, deregulation, protectionism, and the overt politicisation of monetary policy.

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