Traders and investors seem to agree on one thing about Tuesday's US presidential election: The markets want a clear winner by Wednesday morning.
The most recent Reuters/Ipsos tracking poll shows a tight national race, with Democratic President Barack Obama up two points against his challenger, Republican Mitt Romney, at 48 percent to 46 percent. Polling averages also show Obama with small but critical leads in Ohio, Virginia and Iowa.
Some market analysts forecast doomsday scenarios if a particular candidate wins - predictions that usually reflect their political leanings more than anything else.
But markets hate uncertainty, and having a drawn-out US presidential election would be the ultimate uncertainty. Few investors on either side want a repeat of the protracted fight that followed the 2000 race between Al Gore and George W. Bush.
"If we wake up Wednesday morning and we don't know the results, that also pushes off the dealing with the fiscal cliff, which is the next most important thing in our agenda," said Art Hogan, managing director of Lazard Capital Markets in New York.
Markets are terrified of this next step for the United States - figuring out how to stave off the fiscal cliff, or $600 billion in tax increases and spending cuts that could kick in next year and send the US economy reeling.
The stock market "has been directionless over the last few weeks because of uncertainty about what fiscal and tax policy looks like next year," said Perry Piazza, director of investment strategy at Contango Capital Advisors in San Francisco. "You could argue that just having the uncertainty behind us could lead to a bit of a relief rally."
The equity options market is pricing in a 20- to 30-point in either direction for the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index on Wednesday, according to Marko Kolanovic, global head of derivative and quantitative strategies at JPMorgan.
Many believe the larger move could come as a result of a Romney win. "I think the market is expecting an Obama victory, so I think the most important thing is that you don't get much of a response if you have an Obama victory," Jonathan Golub, chief US equity strategist at UBS Securities, told Reuters.
NEXT HEAD OF THE FED
One concern in the markets is that a Romney victory would throw the status of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke into doubt.
Romney has said he would replace Bernanke, whose dovish monetary policy has been a pillar of the gains in both US bond and stock prices in the recent years.
The benchmark S&P 500 has rallied 67 percent since Obama took office - one of the most impressive runs ever for stocks under a single president.
And despite a downgrade of the US credit rating from the Standard and Poor's agency in August 2011, yields on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note hit historic lows last July. Cumulative returns for all maturities on all US Treasuries are at 14 percent since Obama took office, according to data from Barclays.
A Romney victory could increase interest-rate volatility as a new administration challenges Federal Reserve policy, said Tom Sowanick, co-president and chief investment officer at OmniVest Group LLC in Princeton, New Jersey.
But if Obama gets four more years in the White House, Sowanick said, the current policy of quantitative easing has the potential to accelerate.
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