Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Scott Bessent"


3 mentions found


Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNow is the last chance for America to grow its way out of debt problem, says Key Square Group CEOScott Bessent, Key Square Group founder and CEO, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss how the candidates should consider working the federal budget, where the spending is coming from, and much more.
Persons: Scott Bessent Organizations: Key Square Group Locations: America
Wall Street relationshipsOne of Vance's earliest interactions with Wall Street came shortly after the November 2016 presidential election, when he headlined a lunch in New York to discuss his newly published memoir. John Underwood, a longtime managing director at Goldman Sachs, encouraged his allies to support and raise money for Vance's Senate campaign, according to people familiar with the matter. He told them the Trump campaign would need "hundreds of millions of dollars" to compete with Vice President Kamala Harris' fundraising surge. The Ohio Republican's opposition to Wall Street was on full display during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee in July. "Wall Street barons crashed the economy and American builders went out of business," Vance said in his nomination acceptance speech.
Persons: Vance, Marco Bello, Sen, JD Vance, Donald Trump's, Scott Bessent, Morgan Stanley's Jonathan Burkan, Cantor Fitzgerald, Howard Lutnick, Norm Champ, Keith Rabois, Jacob Helberg, J.D, Champ, Sander Gerber, Gerber, Goldman Sachs, Ohio Republican Sen, Rob Portman, John Underwood, Underwood, Steve Case, Trump, Omeed Malik, Emil Henry, Henry, Bush, Ted Virtue, Woody Johnson, Clifford Sobel, Richard Kurtz, Kamala Harris, Harris, Malik, John Paulson, Reuben Jeffery III Organizations: Republican U.S, Reuters, Ohio, Trump, Vance, Securities and Exchange Commission, CNBC, Hudson, Hudson Bay Capital, Netflix, Allen & Company, Ohio Republican, Senate, AOL, Tiger Infrastructure Partners, New York Jets, Hamptons, Valor Capital, Rockefeller & Co, Wall, Republican National Convention Locations: Kenosha, Kenosha , Wisconsin, U.S, New York City, Hudson Bay, New York, Ohio, Sun Valley , Idaho, Washington, Milwaukee
There’s a story going around Wall Street that the Treasury Department is trying to help Democratic candidates in November by how it issues debt. I don’t buy it. Scott Bessent, a hedge fund manager who has raised money for Donald Trump’s campaign, told me last week that he thinks Janet Yellen, the current Treasury secretary, is an “apparatchik” for the White House whose behavior is “appalling.”Nouriel Roubini, a well-known economist who describes himself as a lifelong Democrat, isn’t as harsh as Bessent, but he told me he thinks the Treasury Department is inappropriately engaging in a kind of monetary policy, which is the purview of the Federal Reserve. “The Fed is in charge of managing the business cycle,” he said. “Treasury doesn’t have that mandate.”I’ll explain why I think Bessent, Roubini and others are barking up the wrong tree, but first I’ll lay out their argument.
Persons: Scott Bessent, Donald Trump’s, Janet Yellen, , Nouriel, isn’t Organizations: Treasury Department, Democratic, White, Department, Federal Reserve, Treasury Locations: Roubini
Total: 3