Top economist Larry Summers is highly concerned U.S. Treasuries were trading ‘like those of an emerging market nation’

Larry Summers was not assuaged by Trump's tariff pause. The former Treasury secretary under Bill Clinton has a history of making prescient calls on the economy and his views have always carried great weight with policymakers. Over two wide-ranging interviews with Fortune , he spoke candidly about Trump's recent moves and what he sees happening in the economy. Put simply, the issues he raises should alarm anyone who owns stocks or bonds, frets over spiking grocery prices, or is shopping for a home loan. "Even with the pullback of the reciprocal tariffs, we have the highest tariffs in 100 years. The incremental tariffs are 10x those in Trump's first administration," Summers told me. He added that the tariff offensive is making the U.S. a far less welcoming place for foreign investment—a status that we must maintain to finance our capital spending and federal borrowing at low interest costs. "If you thought you'd wait until things settle down before investing in the US, nothing that happened [on April 9] would talk you out of that view," he said. Here are some excerpts from our spirited conversation which included everything from madness in the bond market to whether DOGE will work.

On the bond market

A big red flag for Summers is turmoil in the bond market that started the day before Trump made his retreat. "I do think that the aberrant pattern in which long-term Treasuries were moving speaks to a very concerning situation in which the U.S. assets are trading more like those of an emerging market nation than those of nation with the world’s reserve currency," Summers told me. "The fact that when they perceive more risk people are moving out of instead of into U.S. long-term bonds raises substantial concerns, and raises possibility of a [negative] government funding episode."

On the first signs of recession

Summers noted that we're already seeing the first signals of a possible recession. "Confidence indicators are declining quite sharply," he stated. "And we see businesses sharply delaying investment because of uncertainty."

Summers hammered home that the downturn would be both self-inflicted and probably severe, adding: “This is our first ‘iatrogenic’ recession. That’s an illness that occurs when you go to the hospital and get sick from the hospital, not from a preexisting condition, and avoiding it is a preoccupation of medical people. In the past, we’ve seen meltdowns from the failure of particular firms like Lehman Brothers, or from external events such as the Asian financial crisis or that have come from business cycle dynamics, such as in the 1929 market drop and onset of the Depression.

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