News that Winston Peters will not hold the purse strings as Finance Minister or hold sway over monetary policy will have reassured international markets.
Despite the gravity of Peters' speech last night, the fundamentals of capitalism in New Zealand are not about to be overturned.
Our new finance minister Grant Robertson spent some time reassuring business on Labour's commitment to fiscal responsibility.
And his ideas for reform of the Reserve Bank Act are not radical by international standards.
We'll likely see the Bank move to a committee-based decision process on rate setting. The current regime was in favour of that.
They'll be less keen on suggestions that independent board members are added to the committee but that will be worked through with the appointment of a new Governor in the next few months.
Robertson has also suggested the policy targets should include a focus on unemployment as well as inflation.
Purists will be concerned that this may split the focus of the Bank and dilute effectiveness. But many central banks - like the US Federal Reserve - already include it as a measure.
And from a practical point of view it won't change much while unemployment sits below 5 per cent.
The stock market fell this morning by about 1 per cent. But it bounced back and remarkably close teh day in the black - up 0.7 per cent.
It was was the 13th day of an unbroken winning streak and this bull market was not about to let politics derail it.
Hit hardest were the retirement village operators, whose valuations are closely tied to property prices.
That sharemarket reaction indicates an expectation that property prices will take a hit in the next few months.
The Auckland market has been slowing and had effectively stalled in the lead-up to the election as it waited for a signal.
Yesterday's result was not the signal property investors would have hoped for.
But that's democracy and many people have been hoping for a fall.
Robertson's immediate task now is to reassure business and markets.
If Labour wants a honeymoon period to push through some significant social change it will need the economy to stay strong.
In the short term that hinges on confidence.
Both business and consumer confidence fell in the lead-up to the election.
ASB economists in their report this morning predict a short sharp headwind for the economy.
The biggest risk is the property market as potential changes to immigration and foreign investment rules emerge.
But as statistics out today show, immigration has already peaked so depending on the time it takes to implement policy, it may already be largely irrelevant.