Trump's Treasury Selection Seen as Calming for Investors
President-elect Donald Trump’s choice of Scott Bessent for Treasury secretary could lift some of the gloom that has pervaded the sagging U.S. government bond market in recent weeks, investors said.
The selection comes after days of speculation that weighed on Treasury markets already dogged by worries over a potential rebound in inflation and increase in the federal budget deficit from Trump’s economic plans such as tax cuts and import tariffs.
The benchmark U.S. 10-year yield, which moves inversely to bond prices, is hovering near a five-month high following a weeks-long selloff in Treasuries. Uncertainty over who would fill the Treasury role added to the selloff in recent days, investors said.
“This is the big thing everyone’s been waiting for,” said Michael Purves, CEO of Tallbacken Capital Advisors in New York. “There was some level of anxiety priced in that Trump was going to pick someone who was not good or some kind of absolute tariff fanatic, so this is a very good answer for Wall Street.”
The Treasury secretary oversees U.S. economic and tax policy, and Trump’s nominee will be tasked with carrying out his plans. As a result, the investment world, from global bond traders to U.S. corporate treasurers, is keenly interested in his pick’s economic views and the kind of counsel they will give Trump behind closed doors.
“Since the election, 30-year bond yields have ripped higher, on the expectation that Donald Trump will bring about higher deficits,” he said. “Now this sets the stage for more fiscal discipline, which the market is really going to welcome.”
Bessent, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment, has advocated for tax reform and deregulation, particularly to spur more bank lending and energy production, as noted in a recent opinion piece he wrote for The Wall Street Journal.
Ed Al-Hussainy, senior interest rate strategist at Columbia Threadneedle, said any new Treasury secretary would come under scrutiny from investors eager to know the person’s views on key aspects of the job, from managing the maturing structure of U.S. government debt to how the person would react in a recession or during episodes of global financial turmoil.
“We have a lot of people who are very isolationist,” Al-Hussainy said, before the announcement. “So if the next secretary is an isolationist, a financial crisis outside of the U.S. probably gets a little bit worse as a result of that.”