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How Investors Can Find Obamanomics Profit Plays
By: Money Morning   Sunday, November 16, 2008 10:08 PM
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The election of Barack Obama as the next U.S. president creates plenty of profit plays for investors in the New Year.

By Martin Hutchinson
Contributing Editor
Money Morning/The Money Map Report

With his landslide election victory Tuesday - coupled with Democratic gains in the House of Representatives and in the Senate - U.S. President-elect Barack Obama will have the ability to pursue more or less any policy he wants.

For investors who have been trying to analyze the economic outlook for the New Year, the election of U.S. Sen. Obama (D-Ill.) provides a major piece of the forward-looking jigsaw puzzle that these analysts hope to assemble. That’s because the likely trends of the United States and other economies around the world - and the relative success of different sectors within those economies - depends crucially on who’s in the White House, what policies they have, and how effectively they can pursue those policies.

Only one thing keeps the triumph of the incoming Democratic president from being totally complete: The Republicans appear to have held onto 41 Senate seats, enough to prevent the Democrat majority from overriding a united filibuster. In practice, however, there are few issues on which the Republicans will be completely united. Thus, on only a few "litmus test" issues - such as the "Employee Free Choice Act," which removes the secret ballot from union elections - is this filibuster threat likely to be effective.

Obamanomics: From the Environment to Health Care

A review of President-elect Obama’s economic policies - characterized by the term, Obamanomics - clearly offer profit opportunities. Let’s take a closer look at some key areas to consider in 2009.

In the economics area, Obama’s two signature policies are a promise to institute a "cap-and-trade" system of carbon emissions permits to combat global warming, and a substantial expansion in state healthcare provision, notably to include universal healthcare provision for minors.

On the energy front, the support of U.S. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), for the "cap-and-trade" system will make it much easier for Obama to pass legislation quickly, probably in the first half of 2009. Under Obama’s proposed legislation, emission permits will be auctioned to utilities and other businesses with substantial carbon emissions. This has the advantage of being more of a free-market approach than McCain’s plan to give away the permits for free, which would have required the creation of a huge government bureaucracy to decide who would get those permits.

Even so, Obama’s approach has the disadvantage of imposing gigantic new costs on utilities and other carbon emitters.




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