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How Investors Are Reacting After Last Night's Presidential Debate

US Vice President Kamala Harris, right, and former US President Donald Trump during the second presidential debate.

Doug Mills/T﷽he Ne🅷w York Times/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Key Takeaways

  • Financial assets associated with former President Donald Trump retreated early Wednesday as markets digested last night's debate against Vice President Kamala Harris.
  • Solar and other green energy stocks advanced as investors factored in the likelihood of Harris continuing President Joe Biden's climate policies.
  • Truth Social's parent company saw its stock fall. Bitcoin and some crypto stocks also lost ground.

Investors cast votes on a range of politically connected assets following last night's presidential debate, giving a lift to some alternative-energy shares and dragging on cryptocurrencies.

Prediction markets generally indicated a higher expectation of a victory by Vice 𒀰President Kamala Harris victory🔯 after the debate, with Polymarket still predicting a win for former President Donald Trump and PredictIt increasing its likelihood of a Harris one.

Over 90 minutes, the pair sparred on the economy, immigration, abortion, the cost of ಞliving, and campaign rally turnouts.

DJT, Crypto Languishes Post-Debate

Subsequently, shares of Truth Social parent company Trump Media & Technology Group (DJT), which often acts as a proxy for views of Trump's reelection chances, tumbled some 12%, trading at some of its lowest levels ever. The stock, which has a tiny float, is notoriously volatile.

Cryptocurrencies, another asset class seen as likely to benefit from a Trump presidency, also slumped. The price of Bitcoin (BTCUSD) declined from about $57,650 at the start of the debate to about $56,880 when it ended. Its 🍎price continued to slide overnight, and it traded as low as $56,130 early Wednesday.

Solar Stocks Soar

Harris’s performance gave a boost to clean energy stocks, which were among the S&P 500’s top perꦕformerꩲs Wednesday.

Harris, if elected President, is widely expected to continue President Biden’s green energy agenda. Lithium mining giant Albemarle (ALB) jumped 11% on Wednesday, while solar panel maker First Solar (FSLR) and green energy utility AES Corp. (AES) advanced 12% and 7%, respectively. The Invesco Solar ETF (TAN) traded 5% higher desp𝕴ite an inflation report that tempered the market’s expectations for interest rate cuts.

Solar stocks 🍌are believed to be particularly sensitive to interest rates because demand from residential customers hinges on low borrowing costs and a healthy housing market.

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