How investors are betting on the election, from utility stocks to DJT

Investors are ramping up their bets on the U.S. presidential election.

Financial advisers caution against making any major investment decisions related to an election—and history shows that the market consequences of a certain candidate’s or party’s victory are unpredictable.

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“When Trump was elected, expectations were that technology would underperform and financials and energy would outperform,” said Nancy Tengler, chief executive of Laffer Tengler Investments. “The exact opposite was true.”

That isn’t stopping investors from trying to get an edge. Here are some of the ways they are trying to profit from—or hedge against—the outcome.

Prediction markets

Betting markets that let people wager on election outcomes aren’t new. A recent court ruling legalized them in the U.S.

Prediction markets such as Kalshi and Interactive Brokers’ ForecastEx let investors purchase contracts that pay out about $1 if a chosen candidate wins, or nothing if the bet is wrong. Contract prices fluctuate based on demand and the perceived odds of a candidate’s winning.

Some prediction markets have shifted sharply in favor of former President Donald Trump since the beginning of October, when they showed the presidential race was nearly deadlocked. On Polymarket, a platform that isn’t open to Americans, a contract that pays out if Trump wins cost around 60 cents on Friday, compared with 40 cents for Vice President Kamala Harris.

In theory, betting markets offer a real-time look at election-outcome expectations, with real money on the line. But a recent flurry of wagers among four big accounts on Polymarket are raising questions about who is behind them.

The latest polls show the two candidates are nearly deadlocked in the key swing states that will decide the election.

DJT shares

Shares of Trump Media & Technology Group, the Trump-backed parent company of Truth Social, have been a volatile playground for traders who are trying to predict the outcome of the race.

Often referred to by the ticker DJT, the company’s nearly $6 billion market value belies its fundamentals, which include less than $2 million in reported revenue in the most recent quarter.

DJT has achieved meme-stock status, attracting day traders, and its performance has often been tied to Trump’s perceived election chances.