Back in March, when Donald Trump and Republican leadership spectacularly failed to repeal or replace Obamacare, many on Wall Street breathed a sigh of relief. Sure, the fact that the former reality-TV show host had botched the first big test of his presidency was somewhat concerning. But at least Team Trump said they would be moving on to tax reform, which is all corporate America wanted in the first place. Even before the vote on the American Health Care Act was pulled, analysts were saying they didn’t care whether or not it passed, only that Congress “be finished with this bill one way or another so that it can move forward with tax reform, which is likely to have a greater effect on corporate earnings and the real economy.”

Now, however, the White House appears to be yanking the tax reform football away from Wall Street yet again. First came word that Trump had scrapped his original tax plan and would be starting again from square one, meaning there’s little hope the administration will hit the August deadline that Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin set for himself. Worse, this week it was reported that Trump is officially putting tax reform on hold to give health care another go.

The news has not been entirely well received on Wall Street, according to The Wall Street Journal. “We don’t get it. What a waste of time and political capital to return to the quagmire of health reform,” Horizon Investments’ chief global strategist Greg Valliere, told clients in a note on Wednesday. The health-care bill is “clearly a no-win issue for the Republicans” he wrote.

Of course, the fact that Trump suddenly had a complete change of heart should not come as a surprise at this point. In this week alone, the Trump Grille proprietor did a complete 180 on a variety of issues from NATO to Fed chair Janet Yellen, to whether or not China manipulates its currency. Last week, he went from saying Syrians needed to work out their problems with dictator Bashar al-Assad to bombing the country and agitating for regime change. Perhaps the financial class assumed Trump’s capriciousness wouldn’t extent to something so critical as tax reform, i.e. the one thing corporate America was hoping to extract from the pseudo-Republican president. Now, that too is in danger of getting lost amid the chaos in the West Wing. There’s always next year.