In 2026, how will a lose-lose election reshape your wallet?

As we enter 2026, the underlying logic of the global markets is undergoing dramatic shifts. A seasoned market observer pointed out that in the face of imminent midterm election pressures, the current U.S. government’s core goal has become extremely singular: to win votes at all costs.

Poll data shows that its approval rating is currently hovering around only 40%, representing a gap of about 20 percentage points compared to the same period in history. Losing control of Congress would plunge its second term into endless political struggles. Therefore, the political theme of 2026 can be summarized as “Winning at all costs.”

To reverse the situation, policy focus has fully shifted to public debates around “affordability.” This means that the market’s core trading theme will shift from re-inflation to aggressive deflation measures, especially by tightly controlling energy resources to lower oil prices. The goal is to push gasoline prices down to $2.25 per gallon before the fall elections, a key psychological threshold.

Recent actions against Venezuela are not primarily driven by ideology but by the desire to directly control the country’s proven oil reserves, which account for 18% of the global total. This move aims to increase supply significantly to win domestic political debates. Analysis predicts that this could cause crude oil prices to dip to $40–50 by the end of the year.

Besides energy, another potential major move is large-scale fiscal stimulus. Some predict there is a 65% chance of launching new plans before the elections. The specific approach may involve using the substantial tariff revenues collected to issue “tariff rebate” checks of $2,000 to households earning less than $75,000 annually.

This targeted stimulus for middle- and low-income groups, combined with increased disposable income from lower oil prices, could benefit mass consumer retail and reverse the current market consensus on a “K-shaped” economic recovery.

However, aggressive geopolitical measures to control oil prices send a clear signal to the world: the rule-based international order is ending. When the most powerful countries act solely based on strength, the system that once protected small nations’ interests no longer exists.

This has three implications for asset allocation: shorting emerging market stocks, as the safety premium for small countries will disappear; going long on defense sectors, as countries will be forced to increase security spending; and going long on gold, as the dollar’s credit foundation is eroding, making gold a key asset to hedge against disorderly global conditions. Even if the dollar does not collapse, gold still has over 10% upside potential.

The greatest risk may lie hidden within the stock market. The current high valuation of U.S. stocks is approaching internet bubble levels. The biggest risk is the burst of the AI bubble. Wall Street expects AI capital expenditures to increase by another 50% in 2026, but fierce competition and hardware bottlenecks make this consensus fragile.

If tech giants’ earnings reports show any signs of slowing growth, and retail investors stop buying on dips, the market could face a 20–30% sharp correction, which would cause a double blow to the economy and fiscal stability, directly threatening political prospects.

In summary, the market in 2026 will be a grand drama co-directed by domestic political survival and the collapse of international order.


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