How 1-year Trump rally stacks up against other presidents
Donald Trump warned that the stock market was a “big, fat, ugly bubble” just weeks before he was elected. A year later, Wall Street remains on a milestone-shattering run that the president has been eager to tout and tweet about.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 index, the broadest measure of the stock market, has notched 61 record highs and climbed about 21.3 per cent in the year since Trump was elected.
That exceeds the S&P 500’s gain in the first-term election anniversaries of all but two presidents since World War II: George H.W. Bush (22.9 per cent) and John F. Kennedy (27 per cent), according to CFRA Research.
It also outpaces the market’s performance in the same postelection period of several other modern-era White House occupants, including Ronald Reagan (-3.3 per cent), Bill Clinton (10.3 per cent), George W. Bush (-22.1 per cent) and Barack Obama (4.1 per cent). But it trails the S&P 500’s gain in the first year after the second-term elections of Clinton (31.7 per cent) and Obama (23.4 per cent).