Rising uncertainty around the U.S. election could endanger some of this year’s most popular macro trades as investors rush to cut exposures, according to Morgan Stanley.

A number of crowded trading strategies — from going long the greenback versus lower-yielding peers to holding an underweight position in longer-term Treasuries — could get squeezed with investors heading to the exits ahead of November, strategists Matthew Hornbach and James Lord wrote in a report.

“Most investors will choose to pare back risk exposures in their portfolios” heading into the general election, the Morgan Stanley team wrote in a May 31 mid-year outlook. “As first-mover investors reduce popular risk exposures, macro markets could move in ways that encourage a broader swath of investors to join suit.” 

Traders, they argue, don’t have the luxury of “assuming status quo” politics and need only look at the the post-pandemic period to see the outsized impact of fiscal policies on economy and monetary policy. For that reason, they will bring back exposures closer to benchmarks, or return investment durations closer to underlying liabilities, as a hedge against policy-related risks.  

The following macro market positions look risky as elections near, according to Morgan Stanley:  

  • Duration-neutral Treasury yield curve steepeners
  • Underweight U.S. duration versus Europe and Canada
  • Underweight Japan duration
  • Long the U.S. dollar versus lower-yielding Group-of-10 and emerging market peers

Hornbach and Lord also argue that embedded in these positions is an implicit belief that the Fed will keep interest-rates “higher forever” as U.S. economic growth continues to outperform against the rest of the world. 

“This assumption may prove unwise at some point between now and the U.S. election, or perhaps after the election – leaving the stance of Fed policy looking much more restrictive than currently thought,” the strategists wrote.  

Morgan Stanley economists expect the Fed to begin cutting interest rates in September and the 10-year Treasury yield to end the year at 4.10 per cent — some 30 basis points lower than current levels. 

Despite the crowdedness of the long dollar trade, Hornbach and Lord still expect that the currency will nonetheless find a modest bid in the months to come as bond yields in the rest of the world fall even faster than they do in the US. Rising risk premium because of the US election should also prove supportive for the greenback, they added.