"If the Trump administration is impaired it lowers odds of significant tax reform, but it's not clear to me that is reflected very much in the current price," said George Pearkes, an equity analyst with Bespoke Investment Group. "So I wouldn't read into it as what happens next. Way too many possible outcomes and permutations."
A fact that has confounded bears has been the market's propensity to skate along at high valuations while volatility remains low. The S&P 500 has gained 13 per cent since Election Day while the CBOE Volatility Index has averaged 11.9, a little more than half its historical average.
The S&P 500 sits at the highest valuation since the financial crisis and U.S. stocks overall look a whole lot more like a late-stage bull rally than a market grappling with an oncoming upheaval in Washington. The equity benchmark trades at a multiple of 21.5, compared with a valuation above 30 during the dot-com ear and an average 19.6 in the past 20 years.
That's not to say there isn't a point at which the crisis enveloping the White House won't spark lasting turmoil in financial markets. For now, investors attention will remain on Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen's coming testimony to Congress and the start of the corporate earnings season.
"If it spirals out of control to be a Watergate type scandal then all bets are off on new policy but if there was a smoking gun it feels like it would be out already," said George Schultze, founder and managing member Schultze Asset Management in New York. "Maybe some people trade on this speculation but I think the bigger drivers of the market are valuations, where interest rates are and where they're going -- that's more relevant than whether Trump Jr. released emails and met with a lawyer. It seems like noise."