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Trump Backs Down After Bond Traders Protest

America's other checks and balances are still working on Trump.

The president backed down from his initial tariff plan when bond traders protested.

April 11, 2025, 5:00 AM CDT
By Ryan Teague Beckwith, Newsletter Editor at MSNBC

To borrow an old joke from President Donald Trump's first term: Welcome to the resistance, bond traders.

The financial professionals who buy and sell U.S. Treasury bonds for major investors on the secondary market helped force the president to back down from imposing a disastrous set of tariffs on almost every country in the world.

It was a refreshing reminder that checks and balances can still work, even if they aren't the ones described in your civics class.

Trump confirmed Wednesday that bond traders were at least partially behind the reversal, telling reporters that he had been watching the bond market and saw that investors were "getting a little queasy." Wall Street also gave them credit. "The Bond Vigilantes have struck again," market researcher Ed Yardeni wrote. A reporter for the Financial Times even offered an apology for having doubted the bond traders earlier.

To be clear, bond traders aren't some shadowy cabal trying to take down the Trump presidency. They're just a bunch of quants responding to market conditions as they try to figure out how to make their clients slightly richer that day. But at a time when so many other institutional actors — from white-shoe lawyers to university presidents — are failing at their jobs, it was nice to see.

As it turned out, a key check on Trump's financially illiterate plan to roll back 20th century economics turned out to be the simple 10-year Treasury bond.

The federal government issues these bonds four times a year, with interest rates set by how much buyers are willing to bid at an auction. That rate is an important benchmark that affects how much you pay each month on everything from your credit card bill to your car loan to your mortgage.

That's why it was so important when bond traders started, in Trump's words, "getting a bit yippy."

The bond market typically rises and falls opposite the stock market. When stocks are rising, investors prefer to get a higher return there. But when stocks start to fall, they return to the safe-but-boring returns on Treasury bonds. So when the stock market got spooked by Trump's tariff plans, there should have been more investors looking to buy bonds.

But that didn't happen. This week, investors started selling off bonds to the point where some analysts were even wondering if the Federal Reserve might have to step in, as it did during the corona virus pandemic and the global financial crisis of 2008. As one reporter at the Financial Times put it, it's "not a good thing when a market that is supposed to be the ultimate safe port in a storm is suffering from its own tempest."

It's always hard to say exactly what happened. Large hedge funds may have realized that they were holding onto too much in bonds based on a bad guess on how Trump would act as president. Foreign investors might have been nervous about the stability of the U.S. government and looking to put their money somewhere else. Or the so-called "bond vigilantes" may have been sending a warning shot over the White House's erratic economic planning.

But regardless of the cause, the tanking bond market shook Trump.

This came after a week in which the president was not swayed by the historic drops in the stock market, the hits to retirement funds of his elderly supporters, the drop in polls of his handling of the economy, the threats of retaliation from various world leaders, the entreaties from advisers and donors such as Elon Musk, the rare warning shot from some congressional Republicans, the disappointed tweets from some of his biggest fans or the studied avoidance of the subject by Fox News anchors.

As I noted in November, bond traders were likely to be one of the first checks on Trump's grandiose plans to remake the country. But it's just as likely they won't be the last.
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JSul3 · 70-79
@jshm2 Trump is counting on folks buying his crypto currency.

Not long ago, Trump called crypto a scam. Now? Where there's $ to be made, no scam is off the table for Felon Leader Trump.
Not true. 🙄

You know, there is a breakthrough in a possible cure for TDS. Experts say that a large hole in the cranium located near the temporal region, should be sufficient to allow the Donald Trump infected brain fluids to leak out, thereby giving the TDS stricken victim permanent and eternal peace.
How big a hole is still under debate, but doctors say a .45 caliber or a JFK sized cavity should prove adequate.
Carla · 61-69, F
@Carla Thank you for that typical "educated" liberal intellectual reply.

https://similarworlds.com/struggles/bullying/5270634-Have-you-noticed-when-you-get-the-warning-of-potential 🤭
JSul3 · 70-79
@RoguishEyes You have no clue how the bond market works.
SunshineGirl · 36-40, F
The financial markets are proving less easy to control and corrupt than the courts and legislature.
Zonuss · 46-50, M
Once the inner circle puts the heat on you. you gotta give it up.

 
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