Other than earnings there is not much on the radar, economic indicator- wise, until Thursday’s advance U.S. second quarter GDP and Friday’s June Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index, which markets are betting will smooth the way for a Fed easing in September.
That leaves politics. With the new U.S. election landscape, markets are preparing for greater volatility, although there was little sign of it Tuesday. Vice President Kamala Harris has all but sewed up the nomination as the Democratic presidential candidate to face Republican Donald Trump on Nov. 5, after President Joe Biden withdrew from the race on Sunday.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House of Representatives Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries supported Harris’s bid in the election and a majority of party delegates have committed to her.
In a Reuters/Ipsos national poll conducted Monday and Tuesday, Harris led Trump 44% to 42%, a difference within the 3-percentage-point margin of error. Harris and Trump were tied at 44% in a July 15-16 poll, and Trump led by one percentage point in a July 1-2 poll, both within the same margin of error.
While the CBOE’s VIX Volatility Index <.VIX> fell back to near 14.5 on Tuesday it was at a near two-month high above 17 two days ago amid caution ahead of the vote in what has already been one of the most dramatic election years in history.