The Journal. - Republican Megadonor Ken Griffin on Trump's Economy
Episode Date: February 5, 2026Billionaire investor and CEO Ken Griffin runs one of the world’s most successful hedge funds, Citadel. He’s also a Republican who has been outspokenly critical of some of President Trump’s polic...ies. Griffin sat down with WSJ Editor in Chief Emma Tucker at WSJ Invest Live to discuss his concerns about political uncertainty, the dangers of crony capitalism and the erosion of ethics in public service. Further Listening: - JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon on What's Next for the Economy - It’s Almost 2026. How’s the Economy Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Ken Griffin is the CEO of one of the world's most successful hedge funds, Citadel.
Griffin is a billionaire and among the largest Republican donors.
But during this administration, he's been outspokenly critical of some of President Trump's policies,
especially around the Fed, tax cuts, and tariffs.
This week, Griffin sat down with Wall Street Journal editor-in-chief Emma Tucker in West Palm Beach, Florida.
They're at the Wall Street Journal's Invest Live event,
and they discussed the weakening of the dollar, the growing national debt,
and the role of government and corporate affairs.
Welcome to The Journal, our show about money, business, and power.
I'm Ryan Knudsen. It's Thursday, February 5th.
Coming up on the show, a conversation with Ken Griffin.
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Good morning, everyone, and a big thank you to Ken for joining us today for a discussion about
who knows where it's going to take is Ken.
We'll see.
But it's almost impossible to know where to start.
There's so much going on in the market.
in the world, certainly in the news cycle.
So I thought I'd start with a very simple question.
Somebody's just handed you a suitcase of freshly minted dollars.
What are you going to do with those dollars?
This sounds like a trick-asset.
I know-your-customer A-L-M question.
Sounds like I need to call the FBI and go,
I've got a suitcase full of cash here.
Okay, after you've done that, and they've said,
it's fine, you can keep them.
So we've got clean money.
Clean money.
Clean money.
Great.
So first of all, thank you for being here in South Florida.
It's my pleasure.
The weather notwithstanding.
It's still about 40 degrees warmer than New York.
True.
So yes, 55's freezing, but it's not truly freezing.
So if I was handed a suitcase of money today, this is like such a strange way to frame a question.
Look, what investors need to focus on,
is what is the purpose of their portfolio.
And so if you're in your early 20s,
your investment objective is very different
than if you're in your mid-70s.
And you need to always invest your money
from the vantage point
of what you need to achieve
with your investment portfolio.
So if in your 20s,
even though the equity markets
is somewhat frothy right now,
you're still going to be investing
the preponderance of that money in equity markets around the world. And if you're in your mid-70s,
obviously you worry about inflation, you worry about downside risk, you worry about the fact that
that you don't have 20 or 30 years potentially as your investment horizon. You're going to have much
more of that money invested in tips or in commercial real estate or in other assets that have
greater protection from the potential damaging influence of inflation.
Good. What he hasn't said is what he says.
to me behind, backstage, which is he'd put it under his mattress.
But anyway, sorry.
She had way too much fun with that.
Right, okay, onto more serious matters.
Debt.
Now, you've never protect, you've always made it very clear
that you think debt levels in this country have got too high.
The national debt is now running at exceeding 38 trillion.
And off the back of that, there's some evidence
of a sort of sell America trade going on.
So my question to you is, do you think we're witnessing
the early stages of a genuine challenge to dollar primacy?
Look, the US dollar has lost some of its luster
over the last 12 months.
There's no doubt about that.
And I do believe that the United States is unquestionably
still one of the great safe harbors in the world.
And at the same time, policies relating to tariffs,
some of the rhetoric from the administration,
has taken some of the shine off of the dollar.
And at the end of the day,
I do believe that when it's all done,
if you are the strongest nation in the world,
you are going to be predisposed to having a strong currency.
And that strong currency, that reserve currency status,
reduces your cost to capital, brings down interest rates all else being equal, increases the
quality of living for those citizens of that nation, and allows us to engage in the global
economy on a much stronger footing. Yes, it makes exports a bit more challenging, but the fact
that we can amass so much capital and deploy it across corporate America is stunning. I mean,
the juxtaposition between the strength of America's capital markets and virtually every other
country in the world is breathtaking. And we want to protect that, that ability for American
firms to raise tens of billions or hundreds of billions of dollars, whether it's to build
hyperscale data centers, whether it's to pursue pharmaceutical R&D, leaves us in an envied
position by the rest of the world. So what do you think the administration needs to do to sort of make
sure that that supremacy is maintained? Like, is it on the right fiscal track to do that?
So we need to increase fiscal discipline in the United States. We're late in an economic cycle.
We don't know if we're in the sixth inning or seventh inning or eighth inning, but very few cycles
run as long as this cycle has run, and we're still running a significant deficit. At this point
in the economic cycle, we should be running close to a break-even. I mean, if you're not
paying down your national debt at moments like this, when will you pay it down?
And the fact that we're still running a very large annual deficit does tell you that too much
the economy is being supported by the sugar high of fiscal spending.
We need to dial that back.
We need to have more discipline in both spending and thoughtfulness and how we generate revenues.
Like we need to put our fiscal house to order.
And I do worry that that's lost attention and focus in Washington.
And I know the president has to be frustrated.
You know, his first term, his tax cuts were about,
reigniting growth in America.
And to get Americans, in essence, be bolder again, right?
How do we increase investment?
How do we increase productivity?
And he's trying to play the same playbook again.
But what I think is being missed in this analysis is the incredible amount of spending
during the pandemic, right?
That three-year error of profligate spending, just out of control spending,
we need to deal with the reality that we need to pay that debt down.
And America did this after World War II,
and America should be doing that again here today.
And how, I mean, politically, though, it's a difficult, you know, needle to thread that one.
How would you, if you had the president say to him, what would you say to him,
what should he do to bring that deficit down?
You need, and I know this sounds very almost fanciful,
You need to get bipartisan agreement on the steps we're going to take to put our fiscal house in order.
And here's the big issue.
Politicians deferring some of these decisions means that the impact of future decisions will be so much more painful for the American people.
Like that's what we're really doing is we're not deferring some fixed amount of pain.
We're going to cause far more pain 20 years down the road.
I mean, could you imagine today being in your 20s and you see Social Security come out of your paycheck each and every year?
Okay, will the government safety net be there for you when it's your turn to retire?
That's a legitimate question given the level of deficit spending we have today.
So another area of pain, certainly one that you've highlighted a lot, is that of tariffs, which for the last year has been this sort of flip-flopping story.
One minute, they're up, one minute, they're down, one country, is up, whatever.
Only yesterday we learned that tariffs on India are going to be cut to 18%.
How difficult is it to sort of come up with an investment strategy thesis when this backdrop keeps changing all the time?
So, you know, I see my colleagues firsthand have to grapple with this problem over the last year.
I mean, all of us doing the money management business.
How do you create a portfolio when every single company that you invest in can have the terms of engagement changed by the stroke of a pen in Washington?
And this goes to, you know, you often hear business people say, just don't change the rules, all right?
And you sit there and go like, are they that inflexible? Are they that unwilling to change? Like,
can't they go with the flow? But the problem is, is that when you're running a business and you're trying to,
you're trying to grow that business, you're making decisions that have horizons often of three years, five years,
10 years, 20 years. I mean, we're building a new office building in New York for Citadel.
that's a 50 to 100 year horizon decision.
If you tell me the rules of the road
are going to change every couple of years,
you make that decision a far more difficult choice.
If you tell me the rules of the road
are going to change every couple months,
I'm best off making no decision.
Right?
And that's where Washington needs to think about,
what is the pace of change
it's trying to create in the economy and having certainty or having a higher degree of confidence
in what the rules of the world will be will actually help the president achieve his goal of,
in my opinion, of creating more capital investment in the United States and strengthening America's
manufacturing base.
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I wanted to ask you about sort of the dangers of crony capitalism.
You are a big free market champion.
You always have been.
But there is, there has been sort of, you know, you were very clear that you didn't like the regulation, regulatory burden of the previous administration.
I've spoken on that.
But now you've got a situation where, you know, the government is taking stakes in companies.
You've got sort of talk about a credit card, a cap on interest on credit cards.
You've got all the interference with tariffs, you know, and the attempt to reach your manufacturing.
Do you think there's a role for that sort of interference, given that America has to sort of
take a stand against the biggest crony capitalist of all China?
Or does that sort of behavior make you shudder?
Well, let's take a huge step back.
Government has a really important role to play in the economy.
It has an important role in the economy to ensure that consumers have fair and reasonable disclosure.
Like when you're a consumer that picks a credit card, you should be able to get through the fine print pretty quickly and understand the cost and interest rates you're going to pay.
Government has a really important role in the economy in preventing externalities. The archetype of that being pollution. You know, you can't just build a factory and dump your waste into the river in the backyard. You just can't do that. So I think it's important to appreciate that no one, when they argue for less regulation, is arguing for a reversal.
of these very important policies that protect the safe and health welfare of the American people.
When the US government starts to engage in corporate America in a way that tastes of favoritism,
I know for most CEOs that I'm friends with, they find it incredibly distasteful.
Like, we want to go run our businesses and win on the merits of providing a better customer to our products at a lower price.
Like, that's how we win.
And when you start to say that you're going to win or lose because you get a regulatory favor out of Washington, do you know what you say?
God, I mean, I'm close to this administration, but does that mean the next administration is going to grant a favor to one of my competitors?
Or take a favor away from me because I don't support them publicly?
Most CEOs just don't want to find themselves in the business of having to, in some sense, suck up to one administration after another.
to succeed in running their business. They want to focus better products, better marketing,
better distribution, more value created for their customers, some of which is shared with
their shareholders. So these are all great points. And we live in a world in a country where people
really look up to corporate leaders. Why is it so difficult for the corporate world to
voice publicly, the sort of thing you're saying now? So I think there's a couple of challenges.
that corporate executives face on this front.
You know, what we saw over the last,
you know, we go back over the last 10 years,
companies that found themselves the middle
of the whole woke movement
would find their products either embraced or ostracized
by tens of millions of Americans overnight.
And that's created a level of fear and apprehension
amongst the corporate CEO class
to insert themselves in any publicly facing issues these days.
Like, the power of the power of the power
of social media to persuade millions or tens of millions of consumers to make a product choice
is really terrifying to corporate executives. And I think it's put them in a very just intrinsically
like withdrawn position. I wanted to ask you as well specifically about there has been a trend
of people in the administration using their positions to enrich themselves personally.
I don't know if you saw that the journal, we did a story a couple of days ago about a half a billion
donation that was made from an Abu Dhabi royal to the Trump crypto vehicle days before the
inauguration.
Does that sort of behavior matter to you?
Does it bother you?
I mean, of course it bothers me.
Like, of course it does, right?
One of the things that you want to believe is that those who serve the public interest
have the public interest at heart in everything they do.
And I think that this administration has definitely made missteps in choosing decisions or courses that have been very, very enriching to the families of those in the administration.
And that calls into question, is the public interest being served?
And I think that there's just a necessity for us as a society to reembrace some of the critical concepts of ethics and public service.
You know, we saw the same problem with the Supreme Court several years ago.
Wherever you see the signs of conflicts of interest, you give rise to concerns about are the
interests of the public being put first and foremost by those in public service.
And are you optimistic that we're on a trajectory to get back to a world where these sort of ethics
takes center stage?
No.
You're not?
No, I'm not.
Well, that's very depressing.
I think it's more important to be just objective about it because that will then create the dialogue
that maybe will permit us to effectuate change.
But if we just say, oh, of course it'll get better, that actually sort of misses the big picture,
which is, I think, for example, I think the work that you did at the journal in exposing this story
is the very work that we need to see done day and day out to keep the American public informed
about the behaviors of our politicians on both sides of the aisle.
Right?
And to help to create, you know, the press has always been a very important part of the checks and balances in American society.
It's a very important check on curtailing these types of conflicts of interests.
Great.
Well, I definitely second that.
Now, we haven't got much time in this.
So much I want to ask you.
So very quickly, so that we get to everything, just quickly on AI.
Do you think there's obviously so much excitement around AI, you know, all this, you know, this incredible, innovative new technology, it's going to change everything, it's going to lead to these huge productivity gains, quite possibly already is. But do, there is also a creeping sense that I've picked up, certainly at Davos, that people are beginning to think, oh my God, have we really thought hard enough about the impact it's going to have on society. Do you think AI is going to come more to the fore this year as a sort of potentially political issue?
That's a great question.
I don't think it's going to be, I will dread these words in nine months.
I don't think this is going to be a major election issue in this cycle.
And you've caught me thinking through a problem here, right?
One of the challenges that exists is during the pandemic, the labor markets were very tight.
It was very hard to hire people.
And across corporate America, companies hoarded labor.
Like, you know, a number of friends who are in the tech space,
they would tell you openly that their workforces were 20% bigger,
they were 30% bigger than need be.
But they didn't want to let anybody go
because no one knew what work from home was going to mean in terms of productivity.
Clearly, most of the country's gone back to work in the office,
but in that transition, there was a lot of turnover
of people, you know, Citadel put in place, say, thou must come back to the office very early,
and we lost a few percent of our workforce over that. For us, it was worth it for the collaboration
that goes with that, but, like, these are the kinds of issues that corporate America was
navigating. Okay, the employment market today is still reasonably robust, but it's not
as tight as it was two years ago. And companies are now saying, do you know what, I've
I can trim some of my workforce in areas that are not strategic.
I can tighten my belt a little bit here at this moment time.
What a great headline.
I'm sorry, I'm letting you go because we've introduced AI in our business.
It's just much more kinder and gentler than saying,
I've kind of employed you for the last three years,
but I don't really need you.
Right?
So I think AI has gotten a lot of very very,
negative headlines in terms of being the excuse that companies have used to trim their
workforces down. But objectively, I think very few businesses are actually seeing productivity
gains that come anywhere close to the headline of job losses that we have seen. I just,
I haven't seen it. Good. Okay. I have got time for one more question. Last night, I went around
asking people what question, I was soliciting them saying, what question would you like to ask
Ken. And it was remarkably consistent what they said. Can you, and I'm going to ask you,
can you, do you know what that question is that they want me to ask you? I mean, I always
ask, is the market going up or down over the next three months? No, it's not that. Want to know?
Sure. They want to know if you've ever considered throwing your hat into the ring for public
office, to run even for the presidency. That's a bold question. Indeed. They asked me,
to ask you. So, you know, I studied economics and government at Harvard and have always had
deep interest in public policy issues. You know, I'd like to believe that at a future point
of my life, I will be involved in public service. I'm very grateful for the opportunities that
this nation has afforded me. But over the next few years, you know, I love my job. I love the
colleagues I work with. And I'm very fortunate to have a number of ties to friends and
and to acquaintances in Washington on both sides of the aisle.
And I think that I've been able to have my voice heard
on important issues, and I'd like to think
that I've nudged the country in small ways,
in good directions.
I mean, the president and I worked on Operation Warp Speed
together in the first administration.
The flights on a Wuhan, Mike Pompeo and I,
made most of that happen together.
So I've found that this administration,
and with, for that matter,
the Obama administration were administrations that you could make meaningful things happen
that benefited the American people.
You know, in the Biden administration, we were able to take an idea that we funded in Chicago.
A small group of us funded providing every child in Chicago in the pandemic with internet access.
I mean, it's like incomprehensible to believe that there are kids in America that did not
have access to the internet.
And there were tens of thousands of such kids in Chicago.
that concept was rolled into one of the national infrastructure bills in the Biden administration.
So I'd like to believe that I can continue to pursue philanthropic efforts and efforts that do help to improve,
let me use different words, to ensure that every single child in America can still get on that on-ramp to the American dream.
Great. Well, that's a very positive answer to the bold question. Thank you very much, Ken Gray.
Thank you so much.
We reached out to the Trump administration for comment about some of the things Griffin said in this interview.
The spokesman said the president is committed to the strength of the U.S. dollar,
but his tax cuts will eventually start reducing the deficit.
And the quote,
the only special interest guiding the Trump administration's decision-making is the best interest of the American people.
That's all for today.
Thursday, February 5th.
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