Opening Bell: Stocks Climb, Dollar Slips On Tax Delay

 | Nov 08, 2017 07:27AM ET

by Pinchas Cohen

Global equities opened in Asia to uncertainty and geopolitical risk exposed as President Donald Trump tours Asia with the primary purpose of creating a united front against North Korea. Investors winced as Trump called on both Russia and China to join him against Kim Jong Un’s regime. Another concern for investors is Trump’s secondary purpose for his tour – addressing other countries' unfair trade practices with the US, particularly China.

Investors in Asia may have found comfort in the fact that geopolitics were complicated by Saudi Arabia's crackdown on princes, government officials and billionaires while UK Prime Minister Theresa May decides whether to fire a member of her cabinet just seven days after her defense secretary quit in a sexual-harassment scandal, which caused sterling to fall. Japan’s Topix posted its highest close since 1991.

While North Korean wasn't the biggest market-moving event, US tax reform is emerging as just that. As investors have become desensitized to the North Korean drama, they have also become largely desensitized to geopolitical risk in general since the Brexit vote. At this point it seems that actual military escalation would drive investors into safe havens. And that's not easy to hedge.

Which brings us back to the tax-reform bill, which we forewarned exactly a week ago may take longer than investors believed. The more time that passes, the more hurdles, it seems, stand in the way of tax reform.