Government Shutdown: What One Might Mean for the Stock Market.


Stocks usually make a quick recovery after a prolonged government shutdown of five days or more.


Sarah Silbiger/Bloomberg

Text size

The White House told federal agencies to prepare for a shutdown beginning next week if Congress fails to come to an agreement over government funding. How did the stock market react? The


S&P 500

rose 1.2% Thursday after the news was reported.

The S&P 500,


Dow Jones Industrial Average,

and


Nasdaq

were roughly flat on Friday. A cautious market isn’t out of the ordinary before a potential government shutdown. But those shutdowns also haven’t left much of a dent.

“It’s normal for the market to sort of take a breather and be a little bit nervous ahead of a shutdown,” said Charles Lemonides, chief investment officer of New York hedge fund firm ValueWorks.

Unless Congress passes a funding bill by Sept. 30, the federal government will face its first shutdown during the pandemic, and the fifth over the span of a decade.

House Democrats approved a bill Wednesday that would simultaneously fund the government until Dec. 3, and suspend the U.S. borrowing limit. Without raising the limit, the U.S. could default on its loans, warned Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. The bill, however, is expected to be killed in the Senate, where it has strong Republican opposition.

Historically, government closures alone haven’t meaningfully impacted equity returns, wrote David Kostin, chief U.S. equity strategist for Goldman Sachs, in a note issued earlier this week.

In the 14 shutdowns since 1980, the S&P 500 posted a median return of -0.1% the day the budget was set to expire, 0.1% during the shutdown periods, and 0.3% on the day the shutdown was resolved, according to Kostin.

Shutdown Start Date President Length in Days Performance During Funding Gap Day Funding Resumed Performance One Week Later One Month Later
9/30/1976 Ford 10 -3.41% -0.90% -0.17% -1.97%
9/30/1977 Carter 12 -3.19% -0.63% -0.83% 2.71%
10/31/1977 Carter 8 0.69% 0.57% 2.66% 0.73%
11/30/1977 Carter 8 -1.23% 0.76% -0.27% -3.17%
9/30/1978 Carter 17 -2.01% -0.77% -3.16% -6.04%
9/30/1979 Carter 11 -4.42% -0.53% -2.76% -0.94%
11/13/1995 Clinton 5 1.31% -0.54% -0.02% 1.98%
12/15/1995 Clinton 21 0.06% 0.28% -2.42% 4.80%
9/30/2013 Obama 16 3.07% 0.67% 1.09% 3.75%
12/21/2018 Trump 34 10.27% 0.85% 1.57% 4.93%

Data compiled by Dow Jones Market Data. Statistics only include funding gaps since…



Read More: Government Shutdown: What One Might Mean for the Stock Market.

C&E Exclusion FiltercommodityCommodity/Financial Market NewsCOMPContent TypesdjiaDomestic PoliticsDow Jones Industrial AverageEconomicsEconomy & PolicyEquity MarketsFactiva Filtersfinancial market newsgeneral newsgovernmentinternational relationsmarketMarketsNASDAQ Composite IndexNorth AmericapoliticalPolitical/General NewsPoliticsPolitics/International RelationsS&P 500 IndexshutdownSPXstockSYND
Comments (0)
Add Comment