Many on Wall Street have set aside concerns that former President Donald Trump would pose a danger to democracy in a second term. The threat his platform could pose to their portfolios will be much harder to ignore. Policies Trump has floated would weaken the Fed’s independence and the dollar while expanding fiscal policy through money printing, Larry Summers, a former top economic adviser to former President Barack Obama and Treasury secretary to former President Bill Clinton, told MM. And Trump could deliver on a number of the nationalist elements of his economic agenda — which include resistance to foreign investment, imports and immigration — without congressional approval, he said. “Ultimately, I think these economic policies are pretty catastrophic,” Summers said. “But they certainly could be allowed to run for some significant interval.” The presumptive Republican nominee’s plans to impose blanket tariffs and mass deportations, coupled with his propensity to publicly harangue Federal Reserve officials over interest rate policy, could present substantial challenges to a U.S. economy that’s already beset by inflation and elevated borrowing costs. High prices and interest rates are big reasons why voters consistently give Trump better marks on the economy than President Joe Biden. And while the financial services crowd generally has a sunnier outlook on the Biden-era economy than does the public, they also want the boost that Trump says he could provide through lower taxes and softer regulation. That combination has been central to the former president’s appeal in 2024. “President Trump built the strongest economy in American history by cutting regulations and taxes and using the leverage of the United States to negotiate better trade deals around the world,” campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said in a statement to MM. “The American people cannot afford four more years of Bidenomics.” Market participants aren’t yet pricing for any of Trump’s most substantial policies when it comes to trade or the economy. That could change soon — possibly as soon as after the June 27 debate — once they lock in on the specifics of what Trump is putting on the table. The most salient component of Trump’s agenda has to do with his plan to impose a blanket, 10 percent tariff on all imports. Presidents have a lot of latitude when it comes to tariffs. But while Trump’s plan to slap a blanket, 10 percent levy on imports could face legal obstacles, “even a ‘scaled back’ version of the proposals is still material for markets,” Evercore ISI’s Sarah Bianchi — who was a deputy U.S. Trade Representative from 2021 to 2024 — and Matthew Aks wrote in a research note. Markets reacted negatively to Trump’s trade war with China in 2018 and 2019; a period when inflation was comparatively tame and the geopolitical climate was less inflamed. What Trump is proposing now is much more expansive. Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and former economic adviser to former President George W. Bush and Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), compared the possible outcomes to those of the Smoot-Hawley tariffs that exacerbated the Great Depression. “It would have dramatically negative trade and growth consequences. There’s no way around that,” he said in an interview, adding: “The retaliation will be swift — because people know it's coming — and severe. That was the dynamic that was so dangerous back in the 1930s. And I’d worry about it again.” IT’S THURSDAY — To quote The Athletic’s Grant Brisbee, “Willie Mays existed, and the world was better because of it.” Rest in peace to the greatest to ever do it. Send tips and suggestions to ssutton@politico.com or on Signal at 925.216.7576
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