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Market Extra: How Afghanistan woes raise risk level even as global financial markets ignore the chaos

There's no direct link between Afghanistan and recent moves across major financial markets, but the chaotic U.S. exit is heightening underlying geopolitical risks and potentially clouding the outlook for President Joe Biden's legislative agenda, analysts say. Read More...

Financial markets have been largely unmoved by developments in Afghanistan, but the chaotic U.S. exit from the country is heightening underlying geopolitical risks, and, according to some analysts, potentially clouding the outlook for President Joe Biden’s legislative agenda.

“When it comes to markets, there continues to be basically no day-to-day relationship between U.S. geopolitical risks and equity markets” as a result of the situation in Afghanistan, said Mark Y. Rosenberg, chief executive officer of GeoQuant, a research firm that analyzes geopolitical risk.

But the outside risk of a terrorist attack or other major geopolitical incident has risen, according to GeoQuant’s data-based metrics.

“It does make the ever present fat-tail risk of a major terrorist attack on the U.S. fatter,” Rosenberg said, in a phone interview.

Put simply, tail risk refers to the prospect of an event that’s unlikely but would trigger a significantly outsize move in financial markets. Some financial professionals define a tail-risk event as one that produces market moves that are three standard deviations beyond the mean.

But would the risk picture be any different had the U.S. exit proceeded in an orderly fashion, in keeping with the Biden administration’s timetable? Rosenberg said that had the Afghan army been able to better withstand the Taliban assault, “it’s reasonable to assume those forces would have been a better check on terrorist activity from Afghanistan. So at the very least, the perception of that risk would have been blunted,” he said.

Read: Will Taliban takeover of Afghanistan tarnish the U.S. dollar and other assets?

The Biden administration was discussing with allies a potential extension of the Aug. 31 deadline for withdrawing from Afghanistan as they attempt to evacuate thousands of people from the country, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Stocks rose Monday, with the Nasdaq Composite COMP, +1.55% finishing at a record and the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +0.61% and S&P 500 SPX, +0.85% logging solid gains. The dollar lost ground Monday, but rallied last week, with the ICE U.S. Dollar Index DXY, -0.56%, a measure of the currency against a basket of six major rivals, hitting a nine-month high last week.

While shifts in threat perceptions aren’t translating into daily moves for asset prices, some analysts contend that political blowback from the Afghanistan situation could have consequences for the U.S. economy and markets.

“It is unclear how the perceived incompetence of the Afghanistan exit may impact the bipartisan infrastructure bill and the social infrastructure bill this fall,” wrote Tavis McCourt, institutional equity strategist at Raymond James, in a Sunday note.

“Passage will increase expectations for growth/inflation, while a political defeat will create another arrow in the quiver of those betting on growth disappointment in 2021/2022 and a quick return to disinflation,” he wrote.

The Senate voted 69-30 in favor of a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill on Aug. 10, followed by a procedural vote a day later for a $3.5 trillion package targeting social spending, climate change and other Democratic priorities, which was approved 50-49, along party lines.

Capitol Report: Biden’s agenda facing test this week as Pelosi, moderate Democrats in standoff

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-California, planned a procedural vote on Monday that would set up future passage of both measures, as she worked to corral nine moderate Democratic representatives calling for a stand-alone vote on the $1 trillion infrastructure bill before taking action on the larger package.

Some commentators also see the Afghanistan fallout increasing the likelihood that Biden will reappoint Jerome Powell, a Republican, to a second term as chairman of the Federal Reserve. Speculation had been rising that Biden, in a move that would satisfy progressive Democrats, would instead nominate Fed Gov. Lael Brainard to the post.

Economist Tim Duy, a prominent Fed watcher, has argued that Biden would now be reluctant to pick a fight with Senate Republicans.

See: The real significance of Afghanistan to markets may be how it’s shaped Fed succession battle

GeoQuant’s Rosenberg said that while the Afghanistan chaos likely would make Biden less eager for a battle over the Fed chairmanship, Powell’s reappointment had already looked likely.

As far as the legislative agenda is concerned, the analyst argued that bipartisan support for spending on infrastructure won’t be affected by developments around Afghanistan, making it likely that some sort of package wins approval.

More important, the situation reinforces the historic trend toward anti-incumbent voting in midterm elections, giving Republicans more ammo in their bid to retake control of Congress next year, he said.

Victor Reklaitis and Steve Goldstein contributed reporting.

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