Trump News

NBC analyst pours cold water on Trump's investor proposal from the Stock Exchange floor

NBC business analyst Christine Romans smirked and took a dim view of a Donald Trump boast on Friday morning that now was a good time for investors to sink more money in the stock market while it was still experiencing a meltdown for the third day in a row.

Speaking with "Morning Joe" co-hosts Joe Scarborough and Jonathan Lemire, she was alerted to a Trump Truth Social post where the president wrote, "TO THE MANY INVESTORS COMING INTO THE UNITED STATES AND INVESTING MASSIVE AMOUNTS OF MONEY, MY POLICIES WILL NEVER CHANGE. THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO GET RICH, RICHER THAN EVER BEFORE!!!"

Asked for her reaction, specifically to Trump's boast his policies would "never change," she replied, "Well, that means they think that he's not going to negotiate, even though yesterday he said maybe he would negotiate."

ALSO READ:'Not much I can do': GOP senator gives up fight against Trump's tariffs

"So again, this is all sort of Donald Trump 'Art of the Deal' stuff. In terms of always being rich, I mean $2 trillion stock market value was lost yesterday and you're going to lose another big chunk of it today so value is being lost as we speak here."

"The question is, the White House, you know the White House is talking about the 10-year note yield is kind of looking at that, not the stock market," she observed before adding, "They've really tried to decouple themselves from the stock market."

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'How do you negotiate with this?' Rage as Trump suggests he's crashing market on purpose

President Donald Trump left Washington on Thursday to fly back to Mar-a-Lago for the weekend. By Friday morning, the stock market was in freefall for a second day in a row.

From his Truth Social page, Trump posted a video from a person going by the handle @AmericanPapaBear, claiming Trump is purposely tanking the stock market so he can get the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates.

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'Stop playing politics!' Trump snaps at independent Fed Chair while pushing for rate cuts

Donald Trump took time out from preparing for a golf tournament in his home state of Florida to lash out at Fed Chairman Jerome Powell on Friday morning.

The president, who has been battling terrible press reports since his "Liberation Day" announcement of sweeping international tariffs, appealed to Powell to drop interest rates which would likely take some heat off the White House.

As part of his busy morning on Truth Social, he wrote that Powell has an opportunity to "change his image" by listening to the administration's demands.

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"This would be a PERFECT time for Fed Chairman Jerome Powell to cut Interest Rates," he wrote. "He is always 'late,' but he could now change his image, and quickly. Energy prices are down, Interest Rates are down, Inflation is down, even Eggs are down 69%, and Jobs are UP, all within two months - A BIG WIN for America."

"CUT INTEREST RATES, JEROME, AND STOP PLAYING POLITICS!" he then demanded.

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Trump's Treasury secretary 'looking for an exit door' after two months on the job: MSNBC

In the wake of Donald Trump's highly controversial decision to put in place a wall of international tariffs that has roiled the business world, the president's Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is reportedly looking to move on from his current job slightly more than two months after being sworn in.

That is according to MSNBC host and former Wall Street executive Stephanie Ruhle, who appeared on "Morning Joe" on Friday.

Speaking with co-host Jonathan Lemire, Ruhle first pointed out that she has been unable to find people who support Trump's decision to begin a trade war that is causing worldwide economic chaos.

ALSO READ:'Not much I can do': GOP senator gives up fight against Trump's tariffs

"I have reached out to so many people in the Trump universe, business people who have supported Trump, who have supported President Trump and, Jonathan, I cannot find one single investor with one single argument that makes sense for these tariffs. All I'm getting is, well, this is what the president thinks. This is what he's always wanted to do."

Turning to Bessent, a billionaire who she said has had trouble defending the tariffs and seems at a loss to explain to reporters how things will pan out, Ruhle pointed out that he is not close to the president and remains an outsider in the administration.

"My sources say that Scott Bessent is kind of the odd man out here and, in the inner circle that Trump has, he's not even close to Scott Bessent or listening to him," she told host Joe Scarborough. "Some have said to me, he's looking for an exit door to try to get himself to the Fed, because in the last few days he's really hurting his own credibility and history in the markets."

"Those have said this man actually understands how the markets work and, what's happening right now, is only going to hurt markets," she added. "And even for Scott Bessent to say a few weeks ago, you know, getting cheap goods fast is 'not part of the American dream.' No, it's not part of the American dream, but it's part of the way Americans live, especially people who are economically vulnerable. They don't have the option to say, 'No, I'd like higher things that cost more.' They need low cost things because they don't make that much money."

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'Woo – buckle in': Trump reported to be risking 'full-blown economic crisis' with new move

A financial journalist laid out a "disaster scenario" that could be triggered by president Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs.

The president announced double-digit tariffs against nearly 100 nations, and CNN's global economic analyst Rana Foroohar warned that this week's stock market sell-off could be the beginning of a worldwide crisis.

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'One man' to blame for 'historically unprecedented' stock market plunge: data analyst

Donald Trump's economic policies have damaged the U.S. economy in "historically unprecedented" ways, according to CNN's Harry Enten.

The president announced a wave of tariffs that quickly triggered a stock market sell-off, leading to the worst week since the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic, and Enten compared the financial wipeout to past plunges.

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'No winners': China retaliates to Trump 'bullying'

The Chinese government on Friday responded to U.S. President Donald Trump's sweeping new tariffs with 34% import duties on all American goods beginning next week, intensifying global blowback against the White House and accelerating a worldwide financial market tailspin.

China's tariffs on U.S. imports, which match the tariffs the Trump administration moved this week to impose on Chinese goods, are set to take effect on April 10. Trump's 34% tariffs on Chinese imports come on top of the 20% tariffs the U.S. president imposed earlier this year.

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MSNBC hosts burst into laughter at Trump official's inability to answer tariff questions

Donald Trump's treasury secretary's inability to answer questions about the president's sweeping tariffs announcement on Tuesday drew gales of laughter from the hosts on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" on Friday morning.

The segment began with a Comedy Central "The Daily Show" montage of clips of billionaire-turned-Trump cabinet member Scott Bessent answering, "We're going to wait and see how this plays out," "I just don't know if there are going to be negotiations," and "I don't know," when pressed by reporters on what Trump is doing.

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That led Comedy Central's Micheal Kosta to joke, "I have a question: do you know anything? Why are you out there doing interviews?" before doing a hilarious impression of the hapless Treasury secretary.

Cutting back MSNBC's Joe Scarborough and Jonathan Lemire, the two laughed as Scarborough quipped, "Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent not completely comfortable, I think, with this whole tariff thing," before turning to the release of the most recent jobs numbers.

You can watch below or at the link here.

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'Who is this elusive Hank Tough?' Observers mercilessly mock Trump's now-deleted typo post

President Donald Trump had a "covfefe" moment Friday when he posted to Truth Social about the better-than-expected jobs numbers and tried to encourage Americans to keep the faith. That's when his keyboard got him into a bit of trouble.

"GREAT JOBS NUMBERS, FAR BETTER THAN EXPECTED. IT'S ALREADY WORKING. HANK TOUGH, WE CAN'T LOSE!!!" the president posted just before 9 a.m.

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'My policies will never change!' Trump insists he won't blink on tariffs

President Donald Trump insisted his position on tariffs would not change despite the stock market entering a tailspin since they were announced.

The president announced tariffs on imports from nearly 100 nations worldwide, as well as the European Union, and China has already come out with reciprocal 34-percent tariffs to match U.S. duties, but Trump doubled down on his position and said he would not blink before they go into effect April 10.

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Republican Party just 'exposed itself to a possible bloodbath': former GOP insider

"Read the writing on the wall," is the advice the Republican Party is getting from former RNC chair Michael Steele who advised a course correction if they don't want to experience a blowout in the 2026 midterms.

In a column for MSNBC, "The Weekend" co-host claimed the tighter-than-normal election in Florida to fill two Republican-held House seats as well as the wipe-out in Wisconsin for a far-right state Supreme Court nominee should send a chill down the backs of the GOP leadership.

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'The terror is real': Tech insiders are furious at Elon Musk but 'afraid to speak up'

Elon Musk has alienated others involved in the tech industry with his indiscriminate cuts to the federal government, but many of them say they're afraid to speak out publicly against Donald Trump's billionaire adviser.

Politico Magazine spoke to investors, engineers, startup founders and public relations professionals working in tech, many of whom asked to remain anonymous in fear of backlash, and they described a chilling effect over the industry in response as Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency dismantle much of the government.

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'We turned out to be the loser': Financial analyst blasts Trump over his economic fiasco

The path that Donald Trump has chosen for America's economic future with his tariff war will result in the U.S. coming out on the bottom, claimed MSNBC "Morning Joe" financial analyst Steve Rattner.

On Friday morning, the noted investment analyst stood before a series of charts and explained that the president will do extensive damage to America's GDP, unless he changes course and backs down as the stock market downslides.

Getting deep into the weeds, he explained to co-hosts Joe Scarborough, Willie Geist and Jonathan Lemire, "Let's start with the stock market yesterday. We talked about the almost 5 percent drop. This is actually $5 trillion of wealth lost since the inauguration. The stock market had already been starting to go down as people got more and more nervous about what Trump was or wasn't going to do –– so a huge drop."

ALSO READ:'Not much I can do': GOP senator gives up fight against Trump's tariffs

"But here's what's actually quite interesting," he added as he pointed at his graphics. "The stock market dropped here was actually larger than the stock market drop in every other major index, every other major country. In Japan, it was down 2.8 percent. In Europe it was down 2.6 percent. In the U.K. just 1.6, and in China just 0.6%. So why is that?"

"Trump thinks he's hurting all these people," he continued. "He thinks everything is, you know, negotiation where somebody wins and somebody loses and he thought he was the winner and we turned out to be the loser."

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