President George W. Bush, re-elected by the
narrowest popular-vote margin for an incumbent since Woodrow Wilson in
1916, may pursue an agenda worthy of a landslide winner. Bush's victory
over Senator John Kerry probably will mean he'll escalate the war in
Iraq to try to defeat insurgents and ensure that elections are held as
scheduled in January. Aided by expanded Republican control of Congress,
he'll try to carve out private retirement accounts from Social
Security, open up more U.S. lands to oil drilling and make permanent
his $1.7 trillion in tax cuts, undeterred by record deficits. Bush made
the election a referendum on his leadership, touting the decision to go
to war and lead the fight against terrorism as evidence of his
character and determination. "The war was important to the voters, and
they saw him as decisive and committed and unwavering,'' says Dick
Armey, 64, the Republican leader in the House of Representatives until
last year. "They had reservations about whether Kerry would see it
through. None of the other domestic policy issues really matter in this
election.'' During his first term, Bush overcame Democrats' misgivings
and invaded Iraq, enacted the biggest tax cuts since Ronald Reagan's
administration and instituted the first prescription- drug benefit for
the elderly. And that was after he lost the popular vote in 2000 to
Democrat Al Gore, winning the presidential race only after the Supreme
Court ordered Florida to halt a ballot recount after 36 days. [more]
Pharmaceutical stocks surge on Bush's win [more] and [more]
Oil drillers and oil-field service companies climbed. Transocean Inc., the No. 1 offshore oil driller, jumped $1.74 to $35.85.
Noble Corp., a driller which today said it will start paying a quarterly dividend, gained $1.90 to $45.57.
Halliburton Co., the world's largest oilfield-services company, jumped $1.54 to $37.08.
A Republican-Led Congress
Republican gains in Congress lifted shares of SLM
Corp., the student-loan company known as Sallie Mae, and W.R. Grace
& Co., a company bankrupted by asbestos claims. SLM surged $4.61, or 10 percent, to $49.22, for
the biggest jump in the S&P 500. A higher education bill that will
be negotiated next year is likely to include provisions that will
benefit the company, Prudential Equity Group Inc. analyst Bradley Ball
wrote in a note.
Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle's defeat
raised optimism that the prospects for the creation of a fund to end
lawsuits of asbestos-related injuries would improve. W.R. Grace added
$1.51 to $12.10. USG Corp. surged $5.81 to $28.
Defense contractors gained on optimism a
Republican-led government will sustain spending in military equipment.
Raytheon Co. added 79 cents to $37.55. Lockheed Martin Corp. advanced
$1.78 to $55.89. [more]