“…Evidence from short periods around the British general elections seems to indicate that the market prefers the rightist Conservative Party (Herron, 2000;Hudson et al, 1998;Gemmil, 1992), however when looking at the returns during the entire period in office, there appears to be no significant difference in nominal or real returns across Conservative and Labour governments (Hudson et al, 1998). Füss and Bechtel (2008) show that, during the 2002 German federal elections, returns on small stock were positively related to the probability of a right-leaning coalition victory, while Döpke and Pierdzioch (2006) argue that, in general, German stock returns tended to be marginally higher under right-wing than left-wing governments. Bialkowski et al (2007) use a comprehensive sample of 24 OECD countries to investigate the influence of political orientation of the executive on local stock market fluctuations.…”