Markets volatile at open as investors await the first Biden-Trump presidential debate

In This Article:

David Nelson, Chief Strategist at Belpointe, joins Yahoo Finance's The First Trade with Alexis Chrisotoforous and Brian Sozzi to discuss what's moving the markets on Tuesday morning.

Video Transcript

ALEXIS CHRISTOFOROUS: Let's get back to the markets now where stocks are slightly lower. We've got David Nelson, Chief Market Strategist at Belpointe joining us. David, good to see you. So is the market in a holding pattern here waiting for the debate tonight, waiting for perhaps a stimulus plan? What are investors waiting for?

DAVID NELSON: Probably all of the above. I think the debate is an important issue. I think everybody will be looking to see if there's a viral moment on either side of the campaign. And the election as a whole is a big holding pattern.

Election night is going to look a lot more like election month, and you're going to see lawyers with parachutes descend on every state with a hanging chad or a questionable ballot. And it could drag on weeks, perhaps a month, and maybe even go to the Supreme Court. And I think it speaks volumes as to why the VIX and other volatility indicators are as high as they are, even with markets that are close to all-time highs.

BRIAN SOZZI: David, we just had former governor Deval Patrick on, and he said it would be-- it's OK to raise taxes on businesses if it would equate to a period of low sustain-- or not low, just sustained economic growth. As someone who has money at play here, money in the markets, does that excite you about putting more money in the markets?

DAVID NELSON: Not a lot at this point. It's a challenge right now. It's almost a bizarro world out there, up is down, down is up. If you look at-- if you look at what's happening, even-- even this quarter, you're going to have-- we're about to report earnings down about 21% year-on-year in a dynamic where GDP is up 30%. That's almost a bizarro-like circumstance at this point.

I look at the broad backdrop, and we seem to be rushing from one side of the lifeboat to the other. We hide in secular growth when we think COVID is coming back or when the economy is going to fail. And then we go back into-- go back into, you know, industrials and other cyclical names when we think that things are OK.

I think one of two things are going to happen. Either-- either we're going to have a vaccine and/or cure to get out of this, or America's going to just understand that we've got to learn to deal with this, and deal with it on an ongoing basis, and find ways to go back to work, because we can't sustain the economy with stimulus after stimulus after stimulus. At some point, you have to draw the line and find ways to deal with the virus and work-- and find ways to go back to work.