Political Connections

If you’re looking for a new angle on investments, you might want to pay attention to their politics.

According to a new study by the Berlin-based European School of Management and Technology, companies with a board member who has ties to a winning political party enjoy a significant bounce in their share price following an election.

Moreover, share prices also rise after an appointment to the board of a politically connected person. The study’s authors claim that seven days after the U.S. presidential election in 2000 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index with board connections to the Republican party posted a nearly 3% increase in share price. Democrat-affiliated businesses, on the other hand, suffered a nearly 3% loss, when weighted by market capitalization. However, an analysis of the S&P 500 showed the boost in share prices is true whether a company is given an equal weighting, or weighted based on market capitalization.

A company was defined as Republican or Democrat if it had at least one board member formerly affiliated to a particular party and no such member with ties to the other side.

The 2000 presidential election provided a strong test case because the tight race did not allow the market to anticipate a result. In fact, the outcome of the November 7 vote was not finalized until a Supreme Court about a month later. The study claims that uncertainty is reflected in share price movements around two significant dates: December 8 when a Florida court ordered a ballot recount (ostensibly favoring a Democrat victory) – when Democratically-tied firms enjoyed a 1.45% gain, while the Republican “portfolio’ lost 1.26%. On December 13 (the day after the U.S. Supreme Court weighed in – stopping the recount – that Democratic portfolio dropped 1.63%, while the GOP-oriented one eked out a 0.32% increase.

Based on the school’s findings, the study said a Democratic victory this November could favor Apple Inc, International Business Machines Corp, and Starbucks – while a Republican win could benefit AT&T, Kellogg, and Lockheed Martin.

“Whilst there have always been anecdotal reports about the effect political connections have for companies, this is the first time a relationship of this sort has been categorically proved,” Jorg Rocholl, an associate professor at the school and co-author of the report, said. Eitan Goldman of Indiana University and Jongil So of the University of North Carolina also co-authored the study.

In spite of the consequences in post-election periods, the study separately concluded that it is not all bad news for those companies connected to the losing party. In fact, in normal conditions, having a board member with political connections to any party is, in itself, a good thing, regardless of which party is in power, according to the study’s authors. Looking at the political connections of board members in S&P 500 companies between 1981 and 2005, the research found that companies “…consistently experience a more positive return when politically connected individuals are nominated to the board, irrespective of whether they have relevant expertise in that field.’



More about the study is online at
http://www.esmt.org/fm/13/080528_Pressemitteilung.59073.pdf

Investors Go International in April

Stock and bond funds experienced net inflows of $24.7 billion in April, according to the Financial Research Corporation (FRC).

International/global funds led the way with net inflows of $12.7 billion, followed by corporate funds with $7.0 billion, FRC data showed. Domestic equity funds reversed course, posting a net outflow of $1.7 billion in April after a revised net inflow of $17.6 billion in March.

By Morningstar category, Intermediate-term bond funds saw net flows of $5.9 billion in April, while world allocation funds posted a net $3.5 billion inflow. Foreign large-blend funds came in third with a $2.8 billion net inflow.

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The PIMCO Total Return fund was the best selling fund for April, attracting $2.5 billion in assets for the month. The Vanguard Total Bond fund came in second, with a net inflow of $1.8 billion in April, followed by the iShares S&P 500 Index fund which gained $1.7 billion during the month.

Earlier this month, FRC announced net sales information will only be available on its site for paying subscribers (See FRC To Stop Disclosing Fund Sale Information for Public).

The Web site is www.frcnet.com.

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