Wall Street opposition to Trump collapses, as ‘pipe dream’ of primary defeat ends

In this 2017 file photo, President Donald Trump stands next to Jamie Dimon, chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co., left, in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington.

Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

As Donald Trump surges toward the Republican nomination, many Wall Street executives have made a calculated decision not to speak out against him, and in some cases they will consider supporting the Republican former president over Democratic President Joe Biden, according to over a dozen people familiar with the matter.

“A lot of people on Wall Street have been living in this pipe dream of Trump not getting the nomination. People were in the first stage of [grief], denial. Now they’re trying to get their heads around the fact that Trump could be the nominee,” said an executive at a private equity firm. Like others in this story, the executive was granted anonymity in order to relay details of private conversations.

This view reflects one shared by large portions of Wall Street, who are scrambling to come to grips with the idea that Trump is the likely GOP nominee for president and he could beat Biden in November. A Real Clear Politics polling average Sunday had Trump leading Biden nationwide by about two points in a general election.

“It’s painful for me to admit this, but Wall Street is basically nonchalant to this election,” longtime Wall Street executive and former Trump communications director Anthony Scaramucci said in a recent interview with The Hill.

“I think they view Donald Trump by and large as benign to somewhat beneficial to the economy and business,” he added.

Other financial executives have little appetite for angering the former president, and want to hedge their bets in the race for the White House, where polls show a close race between Trump and Biden.

“I think unless there is some catastrophic crisis like the [Jan. 6, 2021] insurrection, they think of themselves as stewards of other people’s money and they don’t want to take a position that divides their workforce, their investors and their customers. They are mindful of their different constituencies,” said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a senior associate dean at the Yale School of Management.

“They are not out there to be political ward heelers. They are not out there doing door to door campaign solicitations. They are there to run their companies,” he added. More than practically any other academic, Sonnenfeld knows the pulse of America’s Fortune 500 CEOs.

In the days following the 2020 presidential election, Sonnenfeld convened a storied call of major CEOs, who brainstormed what they might do if Trump refused to accept a peaceful transition of power.

Wall Street’s refusal to counter Trump has grown more obvious as Trump effectively sewed up the Republican nomination in the past week.

Trump is on track to win the upcoming New Hampshire and South Carolina primaries, according to a Real Clear Politics polling average. A FiveThirtyEight polling average showed Trump leading by more than 50 points nationally in the Republican primary.

DeSantis recruits

Haley’s dilemma

Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley speaks to the crowd during caucus day in West Des Moines, Iowa, U.S., January 15, 2024. 

Marco Bello | Reuters

Others planning to intend the event privately conceded that if Haley struggled in New Hampshire, they believed the primary would be over for her. That might be a good time for them to head back to Trump’s corner.

Out of more than $47 million donated by those working in the securities and investment industry toward Republicans so far this cycle, almost a third of that total has come from just one financial executive contributing to political action committees seeking to defeat Trump in the primary.

Jeffrey Yass, a co-founder of trading firm Susquehanna International Group, has donated over $15 million to PACs opposing Trump, according to data from the nonpartisan OpenSecrets.

Yass is a rare exception, however.

“I think most of them have resigned themselves to a Trump primary win and don’t want to throw good money after bad trying to stop him, said Charles Myers, a former vice chairman at investment bank Evercore and a Biden fundraiser.

“The next question is, ‘will Wall Street work to stop him in the general by supporting Biden?'”

In 2020, Wall Street executives combined to donate over $74 million to helping Biden defeat Trump.

A shift in tone

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