Market Watch: US M&A under President-elect Joe Biden
RB Capital co-founder Julian Buhagiar asks how the incoming administration might impact igaming consolidation in the US
Hindsight is a wonderful thing but, let’s be honest, while each of us grouses their rendering of the post-election analysis around the Zoom calls, deep down most of us knew that it was going to end up this way. This same hindsight should hopefully finally be the overdue nail in the coffin – and a warning for the trading desks in gambling operators – of so-called “quantitative polls”, in layman’s terms – models attempting to predict future outcomes solely on historical and empirical data. Because by this point – after three recent epic fails (referendum of 2016 and stateside elections of 2016 and 2020) – there is finally a growing acknowledgement of the flaw in failing to spot the ever-increasing tranche of ‘shy voters’ who say one thing to the pollster but vote the other way. The signals all started with the odds traders when their spreads began to oscillate widely a few weeks ago. Add that to an impenetrable, quasi-religious faith in the status quo, and maybe we should have trusted our instincts when odds were 26/5 and better. Irrespective of how the legal debacles over the next few weeks will play out, what happens over the next term will be markedly different to the last four years. And the gaming, and mergers and acquisitions, landscape will also be rewritten as a result. The short-term impact will be minimal, as it is fairly straightforward, and familiar. At some point US equities will rebound, likely to new highs, reinforcing faith in prevailing market conditions and proceeding under an assured belief that this new climate is stable, well-treaded and well-known. However, beyond the next few months – around a year from now – a new dynamic will emerge. Recall that for most of the previous administration’s tenure, the policies enacted were framed with an end goal to secure a second term in office. Broadly speaking these were protectionist, inward-looking and mostly sensationalist. That tactic had clearly resonated with the home crowd which, according to a more esoteric exit poll, had a resounding 81% of voters preferring to vote for someone with “strength” as opposed to “doing the right thing”. Now that objective has been reached, an even more libertarian attitude will start to emerge, even as the new administration seeks to undo some of the retrenchment of the old guard.