We recently compiled a list of the 10 Oversold Global Stocks To Buy Right Now. In this article, we are going to take a look at where XP Inc. (NASDAQ:XP) stands against the other oversold global stocks.
'There are decades where nothing happens, and there are weeks where decades happen" is apt when starting a piece about global stocks. The four weeks of November and the first two weeks of December have brought seismic shifts that have reworked the way investors expect the world to function for the next couple of years.
Brushing geopolitics aside, for Wall Street, the biggest event over this period was the 2024 US Presidential Election. A hotly contested battle, it saw President-elect Donald Trump emerge victorious. Trump's effects on the markets were immediate as investors rushed to pile into sectors that they believed would benefit from the incoming administration's focus on fewer regulations. Across the globe, the Chinese government also wondered about the impacts of the President-elect's promised tariffs, while closer to home, governments in Europe wondered if they would have to fend off a glut of Chinese goods that might head their way if America constrained China's ability to export it with cheap products.
Starting from the stock market, two sectors were notable for their performance once the election's outcome was certain. These two sectors are the banking sector and energy. The S&P's bank stock index surged by a whopping 13.8% after the election while energy stocks added 4%. In contrast, the benchmark index jumped by 3.8% to confirm that investors were bullish about certain sectors of the economy.
Since this is a piece about oversold global stocks, it's important to discuss in detail how the world has responded to Trump's win instead of analyzing its effects on domestic US stock markets. One of the President-elect's biggest campaign promises is to enact tariffs against China. In a statement made on his social media platform after he won the election, Trump linked the Chinese tariffs with the deadly drug fentanyl making its way to America's streets. He outlined that "On January 20th, as one of my many first Executive Orders, I will sign all necessary documents to charge Mexico and Canada a 25% Tariff on ALL products coming into the United States." Trump added that the tariff would remain in place until "Drugs, in particular Fentanyl" stopped entering the US.
In response, Chinese leaders, who are already struggling with a weak economy are considering whether to increase economic stimulus to battle potential American tariffs. In a meeting top Communist Party officials indicated that they would undertake China's first monetary policy loosening in 14 years, as they shared that a "more proactive fiscal policy and an appropriately loose monetary policy should be implemented, enhancing and refining the policy toolkit, strengthening extraordinary counter-cyclical adjustments." The key concern for policymakers in China surrounds their aim of growing the Chinese economy by 5% in 2025. Should President-elect Trump's tariffs materialize, then America's imports from China will fall and lead to either lower Chinese economic output or a diversion of its exports to alternate countries. The latter option will be tricky due to the US' status as the world's largest economy.