Economists
and investors will be looking for one thing above all from President Donald
Trump's speech to the nation Tuesday night:
Details after the cut...
What will
his promised tax cuts look like? Which Obama-era regulations will be reversed?
Will he push for an infrastructure spending plan this year?
Trump's
broad campaign promises to sharply cut taxes, reduce red tape and boost
spending on infrastructure have helped lift the stock market to record highs.
Yet without some further guidance on specific plans, investors might grow
impatient.
"The
stock market has been pricing in a pretty optimistic scenario about what policy
changes under a Trump administration will look like," said David Kelly,
chief global strategist at JPMorgan Funds.
And while
Trump has made ambitious pledges to accelerate economic growth, many analysts
say they are skeptical and eager to hear specifics of how he would do so.
John Silvia,
chief economist at Wells Fargo, notes, too, that the Federal Reserve is likely
craving more information as it wrestles with the timing of its future interest
rate hikes.
Here are
five areas that economists and investment strategists say they hope to learn
more about from Trump's speech:
---
CORPORATE
TAXES: IT'S ALL IN THE DETAILS
Trump has
promised to slash the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 20 percent. House
Republican leaders have proposed the same cut. But they also want other
changes, like making the purchase of machinery and other industrial goods fully
tax-deductible to encourage more business investment.
To reduce
business debt loads, Republican leaders also want to end the tax-deductibility
of corporate debt. Companies with heavy debt loads could face a larger tax burden.
Whether
Trump agrees with these proposals remains a mystery. He has also sent mixed
signals about a proposed "border-adjusted" tax plan pushed by House
Republicans, which would essentially tax imports while exempting exports.
---
WHAT ABOUT
TAX CUTS FOR YOU AND ME?
Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a television interview last week that the
White House wants to focus on "middle income tax cuts." Yet the tax
cuts Trump proposed during the campaign would benefit mainly wealthier
Americans. Confusingly, Mnuchin had previously said that high-income Americans
wouldn't get an "absolute tax cut" from Trump's plan.
Those
contradictions suggest that the Trump campaign blueprint might be revamped. But
so far, there have been few hints of how.
"It
would be really helpful if we heard some details about whatever tax plan he's
going to support," said Bob Baur, chief global economist at Principal
Global Investors.
---
WHITHER THE
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT?
Trump never
tires of vowing to eliminate the disaster that he calls the Obama
administration's health care law and replace it with a far better plan. Yet
it's far from clear what the replacement would be.
"Nobody
knew that health care could be so complicated," Trump observed Monday.
Given its
complexity and political tensions, health care could take months at least.
Trump also said Monday that an improved health care plan would need to be
achieved before tax reform. That could mean a delay in tax cuts for longer than
investors had expected.
"If
they spend the next several months dithering over this, then it means they
aren't moving forward on tax reform or deregulation," said Megan Greene,
chief economist at asset manager Manulife.
---
WILL
DEREGULATION HAPPEN?
With rough
political fights and uncertain outcomes looming for tax cuts and health care,
the Trump proposal with the best prospect for success might be deregulation.
That would be especially true if the president lays out specifics Tuesday
night.
"It is
probably the least contentious of the stimulus plans that Trump has put
forward," Greene said.
Infrastructure
spending has bipartisan backing, but Greene noted that that support tends to
fall away once attention turns to how to actually pay for it.
Kelly said
it would be important to watch how Democrats in Congress respond to any details
Trump offers on deregulation or other proposals, to gauge the potential for
progress.
---
INFRASTRUCTURE
ON BACK BURNER?
Most
analysts would like to hear more details of Trump's promises to rebuild the
nation's roads, tunnels and airports and how he would pay for it. Steep tax
cuts and a likely increase in military spending could worsen the federal
government's finances, leaving less money to spend.
Investors will
want to hear that infrastructure spending "isn't on the back burner,"
Greene said.
Otherwise,
it would mean long delays before major building projects contribute to economic
growth. Some economists say it could take until 2019 before infrastructure projects
have any real impact.
"Infrastructure
will take years," Greene said.
(AP)
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