U.S. stock futures were mixed early Wednesday as Wall Street kept an eye on two runoff elections in Georgia that will determine control of the Senate.
Dow Jones Industrial Average futures pointed to an opening gain of about 30 points, while Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 1.5% and S&P futures traded 0.3% lower.
The benchmark 10-year Treasury note yield, meanwhile, topped 1% for the first time since March.
Democrat Raphael Warnock is projected to win the Georgia U.S. Senate special election runoff against incumbent Republican Kelly Loeffler, according to NBC News. The other runoff race between Democrat Jon Ossoff and Republican David Perdue is too close to call, NBC News reports.
If both Democrats win, that would make a 50-50 tie in the upper chamber, with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris as the tiebreaker vote to give the party control of the Senate.
Some on Wall Street fear that a Democrat-controlled Senate could lead to higher corporate taxes and tougher regulations on companies, which could weigh on the broader market. However, this outcome could also facilitate the passing of additional fiscal stimulus, which could give a boost to companies hit hardest by the coronavirus pandemic.
Tech stocks could be hit the hardest if Democrats control the Senate as investors rotate away from growth stocks and into names that would benefit most from another stimulus. Also, higher tax rates could hit tech shares more than the rest of the market. Apple and Facebook both fell about 2% in premarket trading.
“In the immediate term, markets are pricing in more stimulus. From an equity standpoint, that means tech underperformance and cyclical/value outperformance,” Tom Essaye, founder of Sevens Report, said in a note. “The biggest takeaway from the Democrats win is more power behind the cyclical/value/higher rates trade.”
Certain stocks gained on expectations for another stimulus to fight the Covid economic slowdown. Goldman Sachs expects another big stimulus package to the tune of $600 billion in the near term if Democrats prevail and take the Senate.
Futures for small-cap benchmark the Russell 2000 jumped more than 2%. United Airlines shares rose 1.5% and Carnival Corp. was higher by more than 2%.
“Once the market digests this result, a pullback would not shock us at all, as at these levels the market is not pricing in tougher regulation, substantially higher rates or an earnings headwind, and the chances of all three went up overnight,” Essaye said.
JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America shares were both up about 3% in premarket trading amid the 10-year yield topping the 1% milestone as higher rates should help their bottom lines.
Names that could be specifically helped by a Democrat agenda gained. The Invesco Solar ETF (TAN) rose 5% in premarket trading.
“I think there’s an expectation … that there’s going to be a lot more spending,” Jason Trennert
chairman of Strategas, said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Wednesday. “You have to remember the house, the initial offer on the table after we passed three fiscal stimulus measures was $3 trillion we’ve had it down to 900 billion but if the Democrats were to pick up two seats, there’s no question in my mind that later this year there would be a sense that more spending is needed.”
On the data front, private payrolls fell 123,000 in December, marking the first contraction since the early days of the pandemic, according to a report from ADP. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been expecting growth of 60,000.
—CNBC’s Hannah Miao contributed to this report.
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Some on Wall Street fear that a Democrat-controlled Senate could lead to higher corporate taxes and tougher regulations on companies.