The Bulwark Podcast - S2 Ep1031: Joe Weisenthal: Everything Screams Recession
Episode Date: April 29, 2025The markets may be hanging in there but they also held strong in early 2020—right up until Covid hit New York. Meanwhile, tariffs are driving consumer confidence down, firms are talking about cuttin...g back on hiring and investments, and Goldman Sachs is predicting that the U.S. will have the highest inflation and lowest growth of any developed economy this year. Plus, Scott Bessent is not a calming influence, and Trump has a real 'War on Christmas' in the works. The Stalwart Joe Weisenthal joins Tim Miller. show notes Joe and Tracy Alloway's newsletter on how the markets can get things wrong (gift) Recent 'Odd Lots' pod on the coming empty shelves & the War on Christmas Joe's Bluesky post on the War on Christmas
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Hey guys, a couple things before we get to our guest.
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On this pod, we've got Joe Weisenthal.
We're gonna go real deep on economy stuff.
He is just the hardest working man in finance journalism.
I've been following him for a long time.
I'm looking forward to getting to everything about our likely impending recession.
One note on the conversation.
We talked a little bit about how Amazon said that they're going to start listing the cost
of tariffs on their site.
The White House responded to that very negatively attacking Amazon.
Since then, an Amazon's Fox has said that they are only doing it on their Amazon haul
program, which is for truckers and long distance material.
That's not going to be on the main Amazon website. Unclear if that was a goof or a step down on behalf of Bezos but that is surely something
that we are going to be monitoring in the coming days.
Just wanted to get you the facts on that.
This is a great chat.
Stick around.
Up next, Joe Weisenthal. Hello and welcome to the Bulldog Podcast.
I'm your host, Tim Miller.
Delighted to have with us today, executive editor of digital news at Bloomberg.
He's cohost of the Odd Lots podcast.
At long last, it's the stalwart, Joe Weisenthal.
What's going on, man?
Thanks for having me.
I psyched to finally be here.
I've been, you know, monitoring your tweets since, I don't know,
fucking I was in short pants, but in a long time.
I feel bad.
Some people over the last several weeks, they're like, oh, I turned on alerts for
your tweets and I'm like, oh shoot, now I just can't like tweet random stuff.
Cause you know, I feel like every one of my tweets have to have some important
data or a chart or something like that.
But thank you for following.
I've had a couple people tell me that over the, over the years.
And I'm like, please turn that off.
I know, just turn it off.
It's not, it's not that important.
It's not that important.
All right.
We got so much to talk about.
I guess let's just start with the top line economic outlook.
Goldman Sachs projecting the U.S.
will have the lowest economic growth and highest inflation of any developed economy in 2025.
That doesn't seem good, but you wrote this week about the strange calm and the S&P 500.
So just kind of talk about the biggest picture.
It is really weird actually, because the amount of gloom from both investors
and businesses and actually consumers,
any survey that you look at right now of anyone.
So what they call soft data, subjective data
is really dismal.
Like we are talking survey measures at the lows,
either of the pits of COVID or in some cases,
the financial crisis in 2008.
It's all dismal.
Tuesday, yesterday, we got a regional Fed survey
from the Dallas Fed manufacturers in the region.
Terrible, all complaining about tariffs.
They're talking about how they're gonna have higher costs,
but not gonna be able to pass it on.
They're talking about how they're gonna cut back on hiring,
cut back on capital plans.
Everything screams recession right now
by almost any traditional metric.
And yet the market is hanging in there
and it's really difficult for me
to wrap my head around this
because I do have this sort of like, I don't know,
I'm sort of cursed with this efficient markets brain
where it's like, I think everything is priced in
all the time and we can all see the drop-off
in shipments from China and we can all see the drop-off in shipments from China
and we could all see all these surveys.
And yet I'm like, am I missing something?
Is the market missing something?
And so we are in this weird moment.
Most of the quote hard data
hasn't reflected much weakness yet.
We haven't seen the big layoff wave
that everyone is anticipating.
So I think a lot of people are sort of scratching their heads, including me saying
like, what am I missing here?
And I don't know what we're missing.
I mean, if we did, that would be really helpful.
You know, the market is down, stocks are down on
the year and they're down substantially from
their highs in mid February.
A lot of people are scratching their heads
about why isn't the market done more given, you know given what we can plainly see in much of the evidence?
Yeah, given that my father was a mutual fund manager and I originally came from the school
of Paul Ryan, Republicanism.
The efficient markets hypothesis was right there next to the pocket constitution for
me as a college Republican.
And I'm pretty shaky on how my Republican colleagues felt about the constitution.
I'm getting increasingly shaky on the efficient markets hypothesis.
Scott Besson, our treasury secretary, had an explanation this morning.
He did a press conference and he said that individual investors are holding tight and
it's just the institutional investors that are panicking.
And that's their spin.
What do you make of that?
There's something to that.
I mean, if you look at sort of speculative flows in the market that we would associate
with institution or sort of individual, quote, retail, unquote, investors, there are a lot
of signs that not just that they're holding tight, but that they're buying aggressively.
You know, one of the things I wonder about is that over the last several years,
traders, individuals have been trained to buy the dip every time. Stocks go down a little bit, buy more.
And what you see in a lot of this sort of speculative names, whether it's cryptocurrencies,
shares of Tesla, shares of Robinhood, shares of IPOs and specs,
not only are they doing well,
they're actually well above their April 2nd highs.
So I think one theory is that there is just a lot of flow
from households still that are largely still employed,
still have money, still perhaps have savings.
And so that is going in the market.
It still doesn't completely satisfy me because again,
my efficient market sprain, like I still think there must be
quote smart money that would sell more if stocks are like
obviously disconnected from valuations.
If it's so obvious that things are going to get really
terrible, you think, okay, well like large institutional
holders, hedge fund managers, et cetera, could sell more.
So I think there is evidence of Besson's theory
out there in the market.
It still doesn't totally sit right with me.
The one thing I'll say though,
is that markets don't always get it right.
And, you know, my colleague Tracy, you know,
she pointed out yesterday how in February, 2020,
basically everyone should have in retrospect
been able to see that this was truly
going to be a global pandemic.
And it wasn't really until it hit New York
that stocks started tanking in March.
Another example that springs to my mind,
I might write about it today,
is that the famous Jim Cramer,
they know nothing rant about, you know,
some of the problems at the banks. That was August 2007. And markets continued to rise for several
months after that. And then we didn't get the real crash until September or sort of late 2008. So
sometimes you can have this big sort of wall of doom coming and everyone sort of savvy enough can see it
and it doesn't necessarily reflect in the market
until it's right there.
So, you know, maybe markets aren't as forward looking
as I like to think they are.
And here's my sociological theory listening to that
because, you know, it appeals to me, appeals to my priors.
I'll admit the idea that Trump is
kind of a human pandemic or a human subprime mortgage, that the Wall Street guys and the
big institutional investors might see all the data that you're talking about, but just
fundamentally refuse to believe that it can be as insane as it seems like it's going to
be, right?
Like, refuse to, it's like, is this really going to be a Spanish flu level pandemic?
Could the subprime mortgage really take down Bear Stearns?
Could Donald Trump really just sit there and Scott Besson sit there and do nothing
as the economy tanks? They will obviously pull back, right?
And it's like're imputing rationality
that's maybe not there.
I think that's totally possible.
People just say like, I just like, no,
they're not really going to sort of completely try
to box out China from the entire global trading system.
We're not really going to raise the input costs
for all these manufacturers at a time
when we ostensibly want manufacturing
to come back to the US.
We're not really gonna raise prices on all these things
right after an election in which inflation
was arguably the number one or number two issue
for the electorate.
So I do think there is still this belief of a blink
or it can't really be as bad.
You see these drop-off in shipments from China to the US.
And I do think there's still this sort of element
of disbelief that actually they want to do
what they say they're going to do.
And again, my colleague Tracy wrote about this,
you know, in prior crises or prior big market events,
you know, there was some clear sense
of what the goals were, right?
So 2008 was this massive bank run,
and we didn't know whether authorities
were gonna step up to stop it in time.
We didn't know if the stimulus would be large
to sort of rebuild back employment and demand,
but we sort of knew that that was the goal.
And in 2020, we knew that the goal was to sort of
stop the spread of the virus, develop a vaccine,
try to backstop households
through checks and other measures
to sort of stabilize the economy
during this period of pandemic disruption.
I think what now is different is,
you know, you don't even really know
what a victory looks like policy-wise.
And I think that's like a very different thing.
We don't even know like what that state is,
what that looks like when we say,
oh, we are happy with what's been achieved,
in part because the ostensible claims
of the tariffs are different.
Some days it's about reshoring manufacturing.
Some days it's about isolating China.
Some days it's about replacing revenue for the government
so that we can cut income taxes on anyone making,
I don't know, $150,000 a year.
So it's hard to know what victory
or policy success looks like
when there's so many different reasons stated
for the policies being put into place.
I think we're gonna bring back all the coal jobs.
That's one thing that's gonna happen.
We're gonna have a golden age of America.
And I think that's a clear objective, right?
We're gonna rebuild Scranton, Springfield,
but not with any Haitian workers.
We're just gonna rebuild it just with the whites
that live there, that feels doable.
I think there is this like aesthetic aspect of it,
and coal in particular,
because look, one of the real booming industries
for the US really like starting
under the Obama administration has been liquid natural gas.
It's one of our big natural gas in general
and then liquid natural gas emerging
is this major source of exports.
But it's very interesting to see the emphasis
on coal specifically,
cause I think that sort of,
it certainly gives off a sort of like cultural thing.
Men in a certain, you know, in West Virginia.
Like a Zoolander.
Yeah, yeah.
There's an aesthetic element to that.
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I want to get to just kind of like some of the specific threats of the tariffs and what
we're seeing with the ships and containers, but just really quick, because to me it's
related.
Like what's happening with the market and our treasury secretary, he was out this morning,
as I mentioned, he said, you know, he's more involved in the Asian negotiations.
He didn't have a lot of insight into the China or European negotiations, but he was on the
Sunday show two days ago and I just, I pull a couple select clips from him and ask you why you think he is out there and why you think he
is seemingly a calming influence on some of the Wall Street guys because I don't really
get it.
So let's listen to a highlight reel of Scott this weekend.
200 deals.
Who has he made deals with?
Is there actually any deal at this point?
I believe that he is referring to sub deals within the negotiations we're doing.
And, you know, Marla, if there are 180-
But those aren't actual deals.
And game theory is called strategic uncertainty.
So you're not going to tell the person on the other side of the negotiation where you're going to end up.
And nobody's better at creating this leverage
than President Trump.
You heard that small businessman saying
his inventory in China might as well be lit on fire
because already what has happened
and the concern about what's happening next.
How do they plan for things if they
don't know what's gonna happen?
Well, what they know is that the China tariffs
are unsustainable because the Chinese cannot sustain this.
That if the business people,
like the gentleman you interviewed, stop ordering,
China has no business model.
I don't know if President Trump has spoken with President Xi.
I know they have a very good relationship and a lot of respect for each other.
But again, I think that the Chinese will see that this high tariff level is unsustainable
for their business model.
Why would they?
You comfortable yet?
Calm yet, Joe?
That worked for you?
Look, I'm not a trader, but I have to say, like so far having listened to now several Besant interviews,
it is hard for me to wrap my head around
what it is about him specifically
that is perceived to be the calming influence.
You know, there's this funny thing
where it's like people are saying like,
oh, we really, you know, we want to buy on Besant days
and sell on Lutnik days. But if anything, you know, we wanna buy on Besant days and sell on Lutnick days.
But if anything, you know, Lutnick has so far proven to be,
in my opinion, the more reliable guide
to what's going on in Trump's mind
or what's going on in Trump's thinking.
You know, I kind of feel sorry for Lutnick,
all of the people like,
criticizing him specifically when in fact,
he's been a pretty reliable measure.
But you know, it's interesting that comment,
he said a couple of times in different interviews
that he regards the tariff level
against the Chinese as unsustainable.
But then he quickly says,
unsustainable from the Chinese perspective.
And obviously, look, you know, that clip,
it seemed unsustainable from the American perspective as well.
And I think a lot of people feel that.
But it's also interesting to think about what he, you know,
he says China's business model,
which to my mind represents a fairly outdated view
of what China's business model actually is.
Yes, they do a lot of sort of low margin,
cheap manufacturing,
but part of their goal over time has been
to actually outsource that to other Asian countries
while China pursues the more high-end
advanced technological manufacturing
that is the source of a lot of angst in the West.
So I don't know when he says that these tariffs
strike to the heart of China's business model,
absolutely in part, there's still a lot of that type of manufacturing in China,
but my perception is that's not where they see the future of the Chinese economy in any instance.
Yeah. I mean, that's not calming to me, right?
I just like to expand on that just a little bit because the small business owner that he's talking about there,
it was a dog collar manufacturer or something, right?
And so it's like, we don't even know if we're talking to Xi.
Seems like we're not. We're kind of lying about that is what's happening
with the administration, so there's no negotiations happening.
We have this tariff that's going to cripple some percentage of American businesses.
And the theory of the case, according to Besant, is that if Americans stop buying
cheap dog collars from China, then their whole system is going to collapse and
they're going to have to come to the table.
And I don't, I don't think that that's theory of the case is like in
touch with reality at all.
Is it?
This is a really tough one because so much of the sort of information that
we've gotten out of China over the last couple of years has really been, or
several years has really been focused on China's efforts to move up the value chain.
So obviously EVs are a big example
and their big electric car companies
are selling all over the world,
excluding the United States.
Huawei, the biggest chip company,
which is now perceived to be getting closer and closer
to the cutting edge, to Nvidia again very big
player all around the world excluding, you know, perhaps the United States and and elsewhere
so I think you know least the stated view of
What that what China wants the world to think is that their main focus is on these like really like
to think is that their main focus is on these like really like difficult tech like batteries, other areas of energy,
semiconductors, et cetera.
I'm sure there is still a lot of employment tied up
in the sort of low-end manufacturing like dog collars
or strollers or umbrellas or whatever else.
So I'm sure that is real pressure and growth
in the Chinese economy has not been stellar
over the last several years.
I think the story is China itself wanting to leave those low margin businesses in the
past.
I agree with that assessment.
I guess I would just add on to one other element though, which is that there are other, and
obviously we're the biggest market, but the Chinese could start selling dog collars to
other Asian countries.
And by the way, it's possible that we could put the squeeze on China.
You could sell me on the fact that this is a, at least a plausible theory of
the case, if it was we're linking arms with Europe, we're linking arms with
Japan and Australia, and we're all going to pressure China and none of those
countries are going to buy dog collars for China, but that's not what's happening.
Like he's alienating those other countries at the same time.
Yeah, this is the other part
that's really hard to understand.
Because if you remember on April 9th,
that was the first of the Trump blinks
on the original reciprocal tariffs.
And they announced that for all the non-China countries,
it would just be the 10% tariff.
They were gonna temporarily for 90 days,
pause the reciprocal tariffs that were announced
in that infamous or famous chart,
April 2nd in the Rose Garden.
And so then the theater's like,
okay, we're going to form this sort of
global ex-China trading block.
And the dream is you're gonna get Japan in there
and you're gonna get Vietnam in there
and you're gonna get Cambodia, et cetera.
But then it raises the question
why the sort
of other forms of hostility towards the non-China countries. And this goes back to JD Vance's speech
in Munich in February where he went to Europe and sort of insulted many of the European leaders there.
Like it's hard to square this idea of this global alliance that stands on the other side of the table from China
With the sort of active efforts we've made to alienate, you know, our friends and neighbors Canada being a good example there
I want to talk a little more about some of the domestic impacts you wrote
My last week about the war on Christmas. Yeah
Last week about the war on Christmas. Yeah.
Real war on Christmas and how there are, you know, even let's say they, you know, come
to some sort of agreement and Besant is right and this is unsustainable and they, you know,
change course in the next month.
Like orders are happening now for things that come for Halloween holidays.
Talk about that a little bit.
This is really important.
We did a episode of our podcast last week with Anna Wong.
She's the chief US economist here at Bloomberg.
She made the point that this is happening right now.
Holiday orders for all kinds of things, decorations, toys, etc.
This is the period when they would be getting ordered and shipped and so forth.
So you can, even if somehow there were a complete reversal,
and I don't think anyone's really expecting a complete reversal, even the optimist, but
even if there were a complete reversal, there would be a disruption.
In the short term, you know, you could imagine some of the really big retailers, okay, they're
going to cut back and they're going to have, you know, she's predicting, you know, noticeably
empty shelves with reduced variety coming up.
But you could imagine some of the really,
the companies with a ton of money, like Walmart,
continuing to place orders, taking the risk
that maybe the trade environment or the tariff environment
will be different later in the summer, et cetera.
But if you're a small business person
and you're in the dog collar business
or the toy business
Specifically that just might be too much of a risk
You probably have modest margins and you can't risk that when the good gets to the port and you have to pay that big tariff
Bill just to receive your goods that could bankrupt you depending on who you are. So another element
Yes, you're you know, there's this sort of war on Christmas, which used to be this sort of obviously conservative trope
because people were saying,
happy holidays and stuff like that.
It's Kwanzaa, we were recognizing Kwanzaa.
You don't want to do that.
Yeah, exactly.
That's an assault on Santa Claus.
Right.
And so you could imagine that not only is there just sort of
less to go around,
but also that you get this big distribution from small to big.
So small businesses, which historically have been one of the most sort of reliable
Republican constituencies, really lose out to the giant retailers
that can afford to take a gamble and can afford to take a hit.
What did your colleague say about the empty shelves of sorts timing?
I think I saw Larry Summers on All In podcast,
maybe talking about this month coming in May.
What's your sense?
Yeah, I think the drop in shipments coming
into Los Angeles is starting now.
So it's hard to believe that they wouldn't show up soon.
Like, you know, as you were saying in the very
beginning, you sort of scratch your head and it's like, is
there something I'm missing here?
Is there some way you can have a big drop
in container shipments into the US
without it fairly quickly showing up on shelves?
It's hard to see not.
Maybe, you know, what some of what's coming in now
would be going into inventory and so it takes a while,
but intuitively you would think like
over the next couple months.
Amazon is the other element of this.
This was something that happened this morning.
So Amazon announced that they're going to start showing how much of the cost of each
good is coming from tariffs.
Tmoo had already done that on the Chinese Amazon spin-offs.
The press secretary just about an hour ago called this a hostile political act by Amazon
and then asked why didn't Amazon do this
when Biden hiked inflation to the highest point in 40 years?
Obviously it's just complete nonsense, right?
That was the price of goods.
Biden didn't, you know,
tack on a distinct inflation tax on goods.
I'm kind of surprised by the Amazon move.
I mean, it is notable. It is going to get a lot of attention.
It might make a lot of sense.
It'll really be interesting to see how people respond
to the visual of that.
And again, it's sort of crazy to my mind
that we did have these several years in which inflation,
the worst in 40 years, was sort of the central economic story.
And then we're right back to this effort to raise prices. You know, it's 40 years, was sort of the central economic story.
And then we're right back to this effort to raise prices.
You know, it's interesting going back
to some of the Besant comments.
One of the things he said,
he's been saying it over the last two days.
So I think something he said this morning was that,
you know, I don't really care about the survey data.
I look at the hard data, the actual numbers,
they're holding up well.
And then he said in another, maybe it was one of the weekend ones, something about how like
consumers are still shopping activity is still fine. These were the exact arguments, the exact
arguments that people made about why the Biden economy was actually good in 2022 and 2023.
Like, oh, sure, everyone is complaining about inflation, but look what they're doing.
They're still shopping.
They're still going out.
They're still taking cruises and traveling in record numbers.
So the soft data doesn't actually indicate
what's happening in the real economy.
So it's very interesting to hear Besant
almost like word for word,
using the same defenses of the economic environment
as we got from the Biden administration
and the people around the Biden administration over the last several years.
Isn't that also usually just a bit of a lagging indicator in a situation like this?
Yeah, I mean, look, in defense, it turned out not to be a lagging indicator.
The funny thing about 2022 and 2023 is that for all the negativity about the economy,
at least on the consumer side,
you know, you never really saw consumers
actually retrench for better or worse.
And you know, that's partly why inflation remained
as firm as it did for as long.
When I think about sentiment measures,
it's hard to see how the dismal sentiment measures
among CEOs,
among small businesses, wouldn't soon translate into real activity.
They're all predicting that they're gonna have less employment in six months time
than they have right now.
So just intuitively, you would think, okay,
they're gonna start pulling down job listings right now.
This is going to have an almost immediate effect on the employment landscape.
People graduating from college next month, you would think, okay, like this is going
to be a materially more difficult labor market than what it otherwise might have been.
So I agree with you.
It's really hard not to see why this sentiment among large and small businesses would not fairly quickly
translate into weakening actual economic activity.
If nothing else, even setting aside tariffs, just the uncertainty over tariffs, you would
presume that this would at least have a temporary pausing effect on new capital outlays, plants,
equipment, new store openings, et cetera.
This is one of the things just about like that, like the tangible impact on the
economy and how these guys have a mixed, you know, kind of mixed message on what
their goals are.
This clip jumped out to me, my friend, Michael Moynihan was interviewing
somebody who does hiring for shipbuilders.
And I just want to play this for you because I think it's pretty, like
her insight is pretty notable.
I sort of sit at the intersection of two of the Trump policies that are sort of intersecting
in my world.
I place people, mostly military veterans, into manufacturing and shipbuilding jobs.
And so we have an immigration policy that is supposed to be bringing jobs back to American
workers and a tariff policy that's supposed to be doing the same in some way.
But in shipbuilding alone, we have to hire 14,000 people a year for the next 10 years
just to replenish our fleet now and become competitive with China.
And that doesn't even come close to what we have to build to fulfill our contracts with
the UK and Australia that we just signed a couple of years ago.
There's just no way to do this with Americans.
We're doing all we can to train people up.
It's very difficult.
It was a pretty good effort actually underway right now.
Millions of dollars being spent, but I really haven't heard a lot of talk about this.
I just thought that was such a potent summary.
That's such an interesting comment because it sort of dovetails with another thing
I've been thinking about a lot,
which is that a lot of these sort of domestic
industrial ambitions, you know,
we saw a lot under the Biden administration
that was the sort of core of the CHIPS Act,
the Inflation Reduction Act,
which was a large part about energy subsidies, et cetera.
People will be debating for a long time
how successful or the efficacy
of the design of these programs were.
But there was this clear idea
that like we want to rebuild domestic industry
and we're gonna de-risk the production.
We're gonna subsidize it.
We're gonna try to get alignments right
so that private capital worked in concert with public goals.
You know, there is this belief,
or maybe it's a fantasy that if you just erect walls
around the country, literally and figuratively,
that you'll get this influx of investment, right?
That you'll get these new factories,
these new high-tech robotic factories
that people would like to see
that sort of look like the gigafactories
that we see in videos out of China, et cetera.
But someone has to spend the money on that.
And that's really difficult.
And in a shrinking economy,
if that's what we're going to get,
if there's gonna be this recession
that a lot of people are anticipating,
investors aren't gonna do that.
Shrinking economies with shrinking profit margins
aren't conducive to high risk, high upfront capital costs for building ships,
for building new auto plants, et cetera.
So part of the big question is like,
you know, you could imagine some tariffs in concert
with some sort of public investment program,
some sort of public investment bank of sorts
to re-industrialize certain sectors of the US economy.
But I think by and large, the Republican Party is pretty allergic
to a lot of those ideas, like these big policy bank ideas,
like using public money to de-risk certain investments.
So it feels like they're sort of a missing piece, if you will,
toward some of the even like the clear areas that the administration
wants to see growth in, such as shipbuilding,
or such as cars, or such as steel, like some of these areas, like where does the money
come from to fund these investments?
This dovetails nicely with another thing I wanted to talk to you about, which is kind
of what was happening in the Doge side of this and on the Hill with reconciliation,
because there's a punch bowl item this morning that I thought was interesting.
It's the Democrats in the House and Senate Appropriations Committee say Trump
and top administration officials are improperly holding up more than 430 billion in federal
funding already approved by Congress and signed into law. And so again, this is a situation where
this feels like crossways, right? Where like you would think they would want to be putting that
money out into the economy when we're seeing these recession sides?
Yeah, there's a lot of confusing aspects of this because the administration talks about
semiconductors as an important area.
And if you're going to think about like, what is like one really critical area where we
have strategic vulnerability, the ability to produce chips efficiently domestically,
and yet we have this program that was designed to do that.
Could the program be modified?
Could it be changed?
I'm sure.
But instead so far it seems like it's mostly getting gutted.
You know, one of the other areas,
there's a lot of talk about AI
and the need for more electricity.
From what I can tell and from what I've seen in reporting,
there's a lot of gutting of the programs
that de-risked new nuclear power plants. And this is an area where there are a lot of gutting of the programs that de-risked new nuclear power plants.
And this is an area where there are a lot of people
within the right that think nuclear power
should be one of the important power sources in the future.
But the upfront costs of nuclear are extraordinarily high
and these projects are extraordinarily risky.
And so it's very hard to imagine breaking ground
on much new nuclear
without that public backing. And yet it looks like that's being pulled away.
There was some discussion, I guess, of a sovereign wealth fund.
Yeah.
But that has kind of dissipated. Are you hearing continued conversation around that?
Yeah, who knows? You do hear about that. But like to my mind, it sounds like a gimmick to me. And let me say specifically what I mean by that,
which is that you sort of like to imagine
that there's gonna be this entity in DC
that can make big investments
and sort of have it be nationally owned by the citizens
and pursue industrial objectives.
We already have that, it's called the US Congress.
Like we already have this entity in DC
that can make big public investments
and have it be owned by the citizens.
We have Congress, we have its power of the purse.
And so like at the end of the day,
like listening to ideas about a sovereign wealth fund,
et cetera, it sounds like what the goal is
to have it be one step removed.
Again, because I think there is this perceived allergy
among a lot of people,
particularly on the right towards
public funding of investment.
And so therefore maybe you sort of sidestep that issue
by creating this vehicle that sort of looks distinct,
that maybe can move autonomously,
that maybe kind of has a profit motive
unlike typical fiscal
Expenditure maybe some corruption opportunities perhaps that but you know at a minimum It sort of seems like an institutional gimmick to me
Yeah back to the allergy on Congress because this is the other element that is all this and you hear this from Besant and others
Which is well, you know, you've got to look at what's happening with the terrorists in in context of the reconciliation
That's gonna right it going to come this year.
We're going to extend the Trump tax cuts, we're going to do all this other stuff.
But I was just sort of looking at, you know, the Hill watchers this morning and kind of
just kind of grabbing a summary of where they're at.
And you know, they're supposed to have something by July 4th.
We'll see.
There's a lot of concern they're not going to.
They have disagreement over how much to cut Medicaid and SNAP or whether to cut it.
They have disagreement over totally how much they're going to turn the budget.
There are still a handful of budget hawk conservatives on the Hill who at least claim to be that,
who say they want to trim to a certain level.
There's disagreement over the SALT tax deduction, disagreement over clawing back some of these
energy tax credits that we were talking about.
There's potentially another debt limit issue before they get this passed if it gets delayed.
I mean, to me, that seems about as uncertain as the tariff stuff, but I don't know what
the Wall Street view is of all of it.
I've never thought that Wall Street understanding of DC is particularly sophisticated.
I sort of think the only thing that Wall Street has really
thought about is, oh yeah, they're going to extend the tax
cuts and everyone sort of assumes that that's going to
happen, that the political chaos in D.C.
won't somehow subsume the tax cut extension.
And then beyond that, I doubt that there are many people on
Wall Street accepted very specific niches
or people are very affected by one specific area of the budget who are thinking beyond
that.
But it does seem to me that there is this, again, hope that yes, okay, tariffs, they're
going to have this sort of, you know, tariffs are tax hikes.
And so that's fiscal tightening.
And so that's a headwind for the economy.
It just is. There is this hope that that we're going to get tax cuts and deregulation and
suddenly it's going to create this big environment for business to invest. I'm sort of skeptical.
You know, energy is a good example of this. People like to imagine that we could just
unshackle U.S. energy and suddenly we're just going to, you know,
drill and pump fossil fuels at a much higher rate.
But if you actually just sort of listen
to energy executives, the big issue,
well, there's two now.
One big issue is that as prices come down,
that's not a very good incentive to invest.
And we've already seen because of there's concerns
about the economy, energy prices weakening
and then you add in the element of tariffs
and higher costs on things like steel tubing and so forth.
As you get a lot of oil companies,
they're already saying like our economics look terrible
because of higher costs and lower prices
and the regulatory component of that seems pretty minor.
I'm sure they really did not like many aspects
of the Biden era energy policy,
but we did have booming domestic production
because there were solid predictable profits
for the energy companies.
I don't think any amount of deregulation
really helps the case when just the basic math
between cost of goods sold and what you're selling
compresses the way it seems to be. Yeah, the energy industry is so interesting to me because
at some level, you know, the dark angel on my shoulder is tempted to laugh at the FAFO element
of it all. But it's like, if you would think if there was any industry that had influence
over Trump, right, it would be this one. And Trump's like his whole campaign is we're going
to unleash all the liquid gold underneath our feet. And so like the one really kind of
traditional Republican policy that he talked about consistently on the campaign trail,
all these guys are donors. They're all old school Republicans. Like you'd think they'd have access
to them and to hear their comments in the Dallas Fed and others. And it's pretty striking that
they're all unhappy. And it doesn't feel like anybody gives a fuck about comments in the Dallas Fed and others. And it's pretty striking that they're all unhappy and it doesn't feel like anybody gives a fuck
about that in the White House, I don't know.
One of the quotes that's been said is that Chris Wright,
the new Energy Secretary,
and I forget who first reported the quote
of someone out of Houston, it's like,
we thought he was gonna be one of our guys.
Turns out he's not, he's Trump's guy.
He obviously comes from an energy background.
He had a fracking company, I believe, I'm pretty sure.
But look, all of them, like small businesses too.
Again, you would think like,
okay, this is a core Republican constituency.
Certainly they're not gonna flatten small businesses.
Freight, here's another area where I imagine
a huge Trump constituency among truck
drivers is a pretty rough time for domestic freight already. And so yeah, this idea, and for better
or worse, this idea that, you know, business can just call up the White House and say, well, you
can't do this. That line does not seem to be as robust as people might have expected.
Yeah. And it's true on the unions side.
I mean, the working, the forgotten man, the longshoremen,
we were talking about earlier,
they were one of the unions that supported Trump
and they put out a statement unequivocally condemning
the recent tariffs the other day.
So, you know, I mean, it's funny,
it's like on labor and capital,
on both sides of it, they're opposed.
I mean, it's really hard to see who is the,
they're very niche domestic constituencies for this.
They're not why-
The shrimpers, down by me, the shrimpers are excited.
The shrimpers.
And I can't really think of any other topic
where there's just so much condemnation
across different realms from major hedge fund CEOs criticizing it.
It's like, okay, yeah, but they're major hedge fund CEOs to the longshoremen, to small businesses,
et cetera.
The number of people who are like really in support of this approach to trade policy mostly
seems like MAGA influencers to me. I want to just go back to the reconciliation bill conversation
because it relates to kind of two of the other things that I
want to talk to you about, which is, you know, look, if they do
extend the tax cuts, which I guess I wouldn't put it 100%
actually, I think that some it's possible the chaos subsumes
that but it's most likely if you just look at their own budget
math, like this thing is going to balloon the deficit
even more.
It's going to balloon the debt even more just because the cost of the extenders are going
to be more than whatever they can find to cut significantly more.
And so that is intersecting with what's happening in the bond market.
I know you had another interview I was listening to with one of your colleagues who specializes
in that.
Anyway, I just want to let you on like the relationship between the increasing rates
and our debt issues.
There's a lot of intersecting things.
Obviously there's always been a faction within DC
that really cares about the deficit per se,
just that gap between outlays and intake.
Yeah, there are 10 of us left, Joe.
I've never really thought that that was like very big,
even like during like the sort of like Tea Party era
that mostly where there's the energy in DC
strikes me as always being we want to kneecap
and massively shrink this sort of capacity
of the federal government.
And sometimes that can rhetorically resemble
a concern about deficits.
But then when you actually look at the impulse
to constantly vote for tax cuts,
never really actually do anything on spending.
You tell it's not really about the deficit.
That's really sort of a thing for a handful of wonks.
The more recent phenomenon
that people started talking about in the last couple of years
is how much the government is spending on interest payments
and how this is becoming a major fiscal line item,
particularly as interest rates go up.
And that's concerning if you wanna, you know,
rein in inflation and you wanna rein in spending,
you can't have interest payments starting to surge.
You know, you heard about this from economists
associated with the Trump campaign,
this idea of the importance of getting down interest rates. this from economists associated with the Trump campaign,
this idea of the importance of getting down interest rates
and it's not really worked so far.
And it's hard to see how it would work
given the sort of constellation of policy measures
that we're getting, whether it's huge tax cuts,
very minimal spending restrictions,
the tariffs and so forth.
We haven't seen much sensitivity.
In the immediate week after Liberation Day,
we saw rates sort of shoot up.
They have settled down.
So there's been some of that.
But if you want to really move the dial on interest rates,
there really has not been much done yet
that would support that effort.
What is your sense about kind of like
the worst case scenario, the fears that we're seeing
around the bond market after Liberation Day and the potential, are there potential actions that could take,
you know, that could get us into a debt spiral that kind of gets out of control?
You know, more than even the situation with treasuries, I mean, look, so the night of
April 8th, and then also April 11th, we did see this big spike in yields.
I think there was just a lot of panic in the markets.
And mostly that was the story.
There was panic and in times of panic,
people want cold hard cash.
And so you just sell everything.
You sell your stocks, you sell your treasuries, et cetera,
cause you just wanna have your dollar
because you need to make your rent at the end of the month.
And I think that's what you were saying.
I think the bigger story,
the market that I'm really interested in
is the currency market.
You know, you have had this rebound in the stock market.
You have had this stabilization in the bond market.
What you also have is the dollar index traded
against a bunch of other currencies,
pretty close to the lows of the month.
That is the one area that you can look at in the market
in which we haven't seen much of a rebound
over the last several weeks.
And so what it looks to me,
and there's other data supporting this,
that by and large around the world,
there's been a declining interest
in holding US related assets.
And that's showing up largely in the form of weak US dollar. You know one
of the theories prior to the tariffs for a long time is people said oh there's
not gonna be an inflationary impact of the tariffs because what's gonna happen
is foreign currencies are going to weaken the dollar is going to strengthen
and that will offset some of the tariffs. It's actually been the opposite the US
dollar has been very weak since the tariffs so this is like a double whammy
it's in terms of making our cost of imports significantly more expensive. This is a doomer pot.
Okay. So give us your doomsday scenario as you look at what is out there. What are some, I don't know,
red sirens that could go off in the next month or two that would really raise your eyebrows?
What's something that you're particularly worried about? I mean, I'm worried about the societal effects
of actual material shortages.
And that if they emerge to the degree
that some people are anticipating,
that it's seriously disruptive in a way
that would be significantly worse
than how angry people got about inflation in 2022 and 2023.
And then a real intense layoff wave angry people got about inflation in 2022 and 2023.
And then a real intense layoff wave that cannot easily be countered
by sort of traditional macroeconomic policies, right?
Because typically in a recession, you think, okay,
well, the Fed can sort of step in
to stabilize things, you cut rates.
And it's very plausible that we will get more rate cuts
this year due to economic weakness.
But there's a limit to what that can do
when supply capacity is constricted, right?
If various entities are running at subpar capacity,
the Fed can cut rates
and then maybe they start hiring again, et cetera.
But if actually whole sort of lines of businesses
are shutting down and there's
nothing new to, you know, there's no reason to have them open because the goods simply aren't there,
then I start to worry about sustained recession that does not rebound easily. And then yeah,
that becomes something that meaningfully disrupts day-to-day living.
Yeah, you're in line with girl Megan McCell, who wrote this yesterday, I saw this.
You cannot fix a supply shock with monetary stimulus.
That's right.
All you do is end up creating more inflation.
That's right.
That's a problem.
And I do think it also ties to our debt issue.
Like the ability to do big stimulus also
is like somewhat limited
if you're worried about interest on debt.
You know, or just the fact that, look,
when they passed the CARES Act in 2020,
there was a lot of domestic capacity
to supply people with goods,
even though they weren't working.
So a lot of people stayed at home,
or they were on furlough or layoff of some sort,
but they were able to spend money to meet their basic needs
and things sort of turned out okay there.
If we're not getting the goods in, if there's another layoff wave on top of that, you could
even ply people with cash to buy things.
But if there aren't things to buy, if there aren't industries to serve them, then it becomes
a lot harder to see how you get that countercyclical macro policy that stabilizes things.
All right, final thing we got to do do just a little crypto before I lose you.
Okay, sure.
There's an insane, and the crypto has been doing well.
Crypto markets crushing.
Trump coin is on the way up.
ETH has rebounded.
But there's an insane New York Times story this morning.
The headline is secret deals foreign investments, presidential policy changes the rise of Trump's
crypto firm.
You can start to see why the Trump coin is going up in this story. Yeah. Among other things, it says, you know, that world liberty sold as
crypto to investors abroad, which is a new avenue for foreign businesses to
carry a favor with Trump, several investors in the coin manage firms that
the federal government had accused of wrongdoing that now the federal
government is no longer investigating.
And then in recent days, this was new to me, Zach Wyckoff, Steve Wyckoff's son
and Trump's business partner on this was new to me, Zach Wyckoff, Steve Wyckoff's son and Trump's
business partner on this was in Pakistan meeting with the prime minister, Sharif, and other
top government officials to discuss world liberty.
And that is crazy.
The president's business partner is meeting with the head of Pakistan asking for money
into his shit coin.
The opportunity for corruption is one of these things where it boggles the mind.
It's on such a high, massive level.
Again, you almost can't believe this real.
The president of the United States launching his own cryptocurrency, these various firms
around him, collecting money from overseas.
It almost breaks the brain when you actually read the
facts of it.
What do you make of, so like, there's theory of the case that like, people start putting
more money into Bitcoin and ETH as we get through this economic uncertainty.
There's a theory of the case where that's a lot of people's extra money, except for
the big investors and that, you know, there could be a run on it.
Do you have a crystal ball on crypto?
I have no crystal ball.
The one thing I will say for Bitcoin is I do get the impression
and maybe other cryptocurrencies that there is real money around the world
that is starting to take Bitcoin and maybe some of the other ones seriously
as assets to hold that are not tied to a sovereign nation,
that maybe it has a gold-like property.
I don't know how large that trade is,
but I think it's big enough
that we should at least be looking out for it.
People actually treating Bitcoin as a safe haven asset,
the way many of its proponents
have been advertised for a long time.
I think for a lot of the other ones, it's a speculative trade. And if you get another big downdraft in
the market and people are panicking because they need to, they need the cash to pay the bills,
they're going to mostly be sellers. I agree with you on that. The biggest true about Bitcoin,
it reminds me of the COVID stuff. People had the money, they're throwing money around.
And that's still a huge part of it. I purchased a couple of those basketball NFTs.
Nice.
I had the Jamal Murray three-pointer from the 2021 playoffs.
I think that's worth zero dollars now.
Oh, I forgot about those.
The apes have gone down to zero.
So I do think that that might be the case in some of the spectacular areas.
Joe Weisenthal, the stalwart, follow him on social media.
Do not set alerts for his tweets though.
That is not a healthy way to live in this economy.
Appreciate it.
Please come back soon.
Anytime.
Thanks for having me.
All right, everybody else, we'll be back here tomorrow
for another edition of the Bullwork Podcast.
See you all then.
Peace. I buy me some better luck Might buy me a figure truck
Buy me some more time Ain't nobody got it now
Need to find me a new grind grind Got a nine left
Just throw in my grind that till I ain't got a dime left
Speaking of dime left Now I ain't got a nine left
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So I just came back to give everybody hope
I was working out for my phone, and giving all I got
Now you ain't got nothing, till you get no one now
It's a recession, everybody dies
So I just came back to give everybody hope
I was working out for my phone, give everybody hope I'm stricken out for work, and we're givin' all we got
Now you're on this shit, and you keep rollin' down
God bless America, never been to Columbia
So I'ma need one and you get the word to Columbia
Yeah, if need be, I get the word to Columbia
And say I can't lie, just played my drive
They say young ones you make a frame?
Bitches, you ain't insane
What's up, I want your money, them numbers be insane
In the membrane, got me ranking my damn brain
For this damn game, I'm gon' do a damn thing
I get to a certain shit, cause everybody go by
So I just came back, to give everybody
It's looking like I'm working hard, to give it all tonight Everybody go by So much came back We give everybody So much came back
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I ain't got nothing
So you give it all now
It's a recession
I'm looking to smoke my coke
So much came back
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Now you're all missing
And you keep going Night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night, night