Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Why Did So Many People Delude Themselves About Trump?
d8a347b41db1ddee634e2d67d08798c102ef09ac
By The New York Times
Published 3 weeks ago on
April 9, 2025

An attendee wears a shirt featuring images of former President Donald Trump during a rally for Trump in Waco, Texas, March 25, 2023. (Mark Peterson/The New York Times)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Michelle Goldberg
Opinion
April 7, 2025

Donald Trump’s 2024 election sent many finance types into spasms of anticipatory ecstasy as they imagined freedom from regulations, taxes and unfamiliar pronouns. “Bankers and financiers say Trump’s victory has emboldened those who chafed at ‘woke doctrine’ and felt they had to self-censor or change their language to avoid offending younger colleagues, women, minorities or disabled people,” The Financial Times reported a few days before Trump’s inauguration. It quoted one leading banker crowing — anonymously — about finally being able to use slurs like “retard” again. The vibes had shifted; the animal spirits were loose.

“We’re stepping into the most pro-growth, pro-business, pro-American administration I’ve perhaps seen in my adult lifetime,” gushed the hedge fund manager Bill Ackman in December.

One Wall Street veteran, however, understood the risk an unleashed Trump posed to the economy. After Trump’s victory in November, Peter Berezin, chief global strategist at BCA Research, which provides macroeconomic research to major financial institutions, estimated that the chance of a recession had climbed to 75%. “The prospect of an escalation of the trade war is likely to depress corporate investment while lowering real household disposable income,” said a BCA report.

The surprising thing isn’t that Berezin saw the Trump tariff crisis coming, but that so many of his peers didn’t. You don’t have to be a sophisticated financial professional, after all, to understand that Trump believes, firmly and ardently, in taxing imports, and he thinks any country that sells more goods to America than it buys must be ripping us off. All you had to do was read the news or listen to Trump’s own words. Yet Berezin was an outlier; most of the people who make a living off their financial acumen had less understanding of Trump’s priorities than a casual viewer of MSNBC.

On Monday, as stocks whipsawed on shifting news and rumors about the tariffs, I spoke to Berezin, who is based in Montreal, about how Wall Street had gotten Trump so wrong. He told me that many investors who pride themselves on their savvy are in fact just creatures of the herd. “All these cognitive biases that amateur retail investors are subject to, the Wall Street pros, are, if anything, even more subject to them because they’ve got career risk associated with bucking the trend,” he said.

Some investors also felt a cultural affinity with the new administration that further clouded their judgment. When wokeness was ascendant, plenty of people in tech and finance quietly seethed at being guilt-tripped and forced to feign concern about social justice. “When the opportunity came to jettison all that, they were happy to do it,” Berezin said. “And Trump enabled them to do it.”

So last October, when Scott Bessent, soon to become Treasury secretary, said that Trump was really a free trader who used tariffs as a negotiating tactic, Wall Street was eager to believe him. “It’s escalate to de-escalate,” Bessent told The Financial Times.

This claim was obviously absurd. Trump has been obsessed with tariffs, which he called “the most beautiful word in the dictionary,” for decades. In his 2018 book “Fear,” Bob Woodward reported that Trump scrawled “TRADE IS BAD” in the margin of a speech he gave after the G-20 summit. It makes sense that Trump would see things this way. When he makes sales, whether of Trump University courses or Trump-branded cryptocurrency, he is usually taking advantage of the buyer, and he views global trade through the same zero-sum lens.

It’s widely known that during his first term, the so-called adults in the room thwarted some of Trump’s most destructive whims. There have been far fewer such figures in the Trump sequel, resulting in the wholesale degradation of American governance. Conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer just directed a purge of the National Security Council. Thanks to Elon Musk’s haphazard cuts, employees who once worked to prevent the spread of diseases like Ebola are gone, as are nuclear safety experts. There’s no one in the executive branch willing to publicly push back on Trump’s threats to take over Canada. Somehow, traders failed to recognize that there would eventually be economic fallout from such profound misrule.

“The markets should have put two and two together that if you’re talking about annexing Greenland, Canada, the Panama Canal, you’re probably going to be more radical on trade as well,” Berezin said.

But Wall Street professionals, like so many other ostensibly smart people, refused to see Trump clearly, mistaking his skill as a demagogue for wisdom as a policymaker. “I don’t think this was foreseeable,” a mournful Ackman posted on the social platform X on Monday. “I assumed economic rationality would be paramount.” What an odd assumption to make about a man who bankrupted casinos.

Berezin thinks Wall Street still hasn’t come to terms with the cost of the nascent Trump presidency. “I do think that at this point we might have passed the event horizon, meaning that even if Trump backs off from the tariffs, there’s been enough damage done to the U.S. economy, to the global economy, to investor confidence, consumer confidence, that we’re probably going to see a recession regardless of what happens,” he said.

He points out that while public attention is focused on the stock market, there are alarming signs in the bond market. Usually, if stocks go down, so do yields on U.S. Treasuries, because they become more desirable to people looking for a safe place to park money. At least right now, that’s not happening, which he thinks could signal a crisis of confidence in the stability of the U.S. government and the debt it issues.

“If we’re moving to this new world where the U.S. just can’t be trusted, then do we really want to hold a lot of Treasuries?” he said as he sketched out investors’ thinking. “Do we really want to use the dollar as a reserve?” It turns out that there’s a price for taking all the soft power America has accrued since World War II and setting it on fire. Who knew.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Michelle Goldberg/Mark Peterson
c. 2025 The New York Times Company

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Lady Gaga to Draw 1.6 Million Fans to Copacabana, Boosting Brazilian Airlines and Rio’s Economy

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Authorities Search for Missing Woman Last Seen at Huntington Lake

DON'T MISS

Russian Drones Hit Apartment Block in Ukraine’s Kharkiv, 46 Hurt

DON'T MISS

Trump Administration Asks Supreme Court to Let DOGE Access Social Security Systems

DON'T MISS

Visalia Police to Hold DUI Checkpoint Friday

DON'T MISS

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Dexter Marvin Francis

DON'T MISS

Fresno Police Arrest Suspect Linked to Nine-Round Shooting

DON'T MISS

Hundreds Rally in Fresno for Immigrant Rights

DON'T MISS

Visalia Man Arrested Again in Child Exploitation Case After National Tip

DON'T MISS

Fresno State Announces 2025 Undergraduate Deans’ Medalists

UP NEXT

Fresno County Authorities Search for Missing Woman Last Seen at Huntington Lake

UP NEXT

Russian Drones Hit Apartment Block in Ukraine’s Kharkiv, 46 Hurt

UP NEXT

Trump Administration Asks Supreme Court to Let DOGE Access Social Security Systems

UP NEXT

Visalia Police to Hold DUI Checkpoint Friday

UP NEXT

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Dexter Marvin Francis

UP NEXT

Fresno Police Arrest Suspect Linked to Nine-Round Shooting

UP NEXT

Hundreds Rally in Fresno for Immigrant Rights

UP NEXT

Visalia Man Arrested Again in Child Exploitation Case After National Tip

UP NEXT

Fresno State Announces 2025 Undergraduate Deans’ Medalists

UP NEXT

Familiar Husband-and-Wife-Duo Bring Thai Food to Northeast Fresno

Trump Administration Asks Supreme Court to Let DOGE Access Social Security Systems

15 hours ago

Visalia Police to Hold DUI Checkpoint Friday

15 hours ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Dexter Marvin Francis

15 hours ago

Fresno Police Arrest Suspect Linked to Nine-Round Shooting

16 hours ago

Hundreds Rally in Fresno for Immigrant Rights

16 hours ago

Visalia Man Arrested Again in Child Exploitation Case After National Tip

16 hours ago

Fresno State Announces 2025 Undergraduate Deans’ Medalists

16 hours ago

Familiar Husband-and-Wife-Duo Bring Thai Food to Northeast Fresno

17 hours ago

Fresno’s Downtown Kern Street Market Set for Return. Get Your Produce Baskets Ready

17 hours ago

Retired Madera County Sheriff Edward Bates Dies at 99

17 hours ago

Lady Gaga to Draw 1.6 Million Fans to Copacabana, Boosting Brazilian Airlines and Rio’s Economy

SAO PAULO (Reuters) – Brazilian airlines are enjoying a boost as fans from all over the country fly to Rio de Janeiro ahead of a free ...

13 hours ago

A drone view shows the stage for Lady Gaga's free concert on Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil May 2, 2025. (REUTERS/Janaina Quinnet)
13 hours ago

Lady Gaga to Draw 1.6 Million Fans to Copacabana, Boosting Brazilian Airlines and Rio’s Economy

14 hours ago

Fresno County Authorities Search for Missing Woman Last Seen at Huntington Lake

Firefighter work at the site of a Russian strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv, Ukraine, May 2, 2025. (Press service of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine in Kharkiv region/Handout via REUTERS)
15 hours ago

Russian Drones Hit Apartment Block in Ukraine’s Kharkiv, 46 Hurt

Elon Musk flashes his T-shirt that reads "DOGE" to the media as he walks on South Lawn of the White House, in Washington, March 9, 2025. (AP File)
15 hours ago

Trump Administration Asks Supreme Court to Let DOGE Access Social Security Systems

The Visalia Police Department will hold a DUI checkpoint Friday, May 2, 2025, to promote public safety and remove impaired drivers from the road. (Visalia PD)
15 hours ago

Visalia Police to Hold DUI Checkpoint Friday

Dexter Marvin Francis is Valley Crime Stoppers' Most Wanted Person of the Day for May 2, 2025. (Valley Crime Stoppers)
15 hours ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Dexter Marvin Francis

Steven Gonzales, who is on probation, was arrested for an April shooting after police identified him through a traffic stop and surveillance footage on Thursday, May 1, 2025. (Fresno PD)
16 hours ago

Fresno Police Arrest Suspect Linked to Nine-Round Shooting

16 hours ago

Hundreds Rally in Fresno for Immigrant Rights

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend