Who Is Scott Bessent? Meet Odds-On Favorite For Trump Treasury Secretary Pick
A number of growing signs suggest Donald Trump may pick hedge fund mogul Scott Bessent as the next Treasury Secretary, which would move the Wall Street veteran—and former colleague of Democratic megadonor George Soros—a step closer to becoming perhaps the most prominent voice shaping the Trump economy.
Scott Bessent speaks at the National Conservative Conference in July.
Bloomberg reported Tuesday, citing anonymous sources, that Bessent had become the choice of top Trump advisers, and numerous reports last week had him visiting the president-elect at his home at Mar-a-Lago.
A South Carolina native and 1984 graduate of Yale University, the 62-year-old Bessent is the founder of the hedge fund Key Square Management, which had less than $600 million in assets under management as of the end of 2023.
Bessent worked for Soros from 1991 to 2000, rising to the firm’s head of European allocation by his departure, and returned to Soros from 2011 to 2015 as the fund’s chief investment officer, departing again to run Key Square with a $2 billion investment from the 94-year-old Soros.
A key advisor to Trump on economic policy, Bessent donated about $3 million to Trump and other Republican causes this election cycle, calling Trump “very sophisticated on economic policy” compared to the “economic illiterate” Harris in an interview with Forbes last week.
A “nice-looking guy,” Bessent is “one of the most brilliant men on Wall Street” and is “respected by everybody,” declared Trump on the campaign trail.
Bessent lives primarily in Charleston, S.C., with his husband John Freeman, and their two children, according to the Wall Street Journal, which also reports Bessent hasn’t talked to his former boss Soros “in years.”
Fellow hedge fund billionaire John Paulson removed himself from consideration to be Trump’s pick for Treasury secretary, Paulson said in a Tuesday statement to several outlets. Paulson was viewed as one of Bessent’s top competitors for the position, with other contenders including Cantor Fitzgerald CEO Howard Lutnick and former Trump administration trade policy official Robert Lighthizer. The prediction market Polymarket assigns Bessent an 89% chance at becoming Trump’s nominee to lead the Treasury, compared to 8.5% for Lutnick and 1.8% for Lighthizer.
Bessent made a name for himself at Soros by reportedly playing a key role in the firm’s bets against the British pound in the early 1990s and the Japanese yen in the early 2010s.
Scott Bessent could be the first Senate-approved LGBTQ+ member in a Republican cabinet (Richard Grenell became the first openly gay acting cabinet member when Trump tapped him as the acting director of national intelligence in 2020). “In a certain geographic region at a certain economic level, being gay is not an issue,” Bessent told Yale Alumni Magazine in 2015. “If you had told me in 1984, when we graduated, and people were dying of AIDS, that 30 years later I’d be legally married and we would have two children via surrogacy, I wouldn’t have believed you.”
In an editorial published Sunday in the Journal, Bessent offered a roadmap of his vision for the economy during Trump’s second term: “Restarting the American growth engine, reducing inflationary pressures, and addressing the debt burden from four years of reckless spending.” Specifically, Bessent called for an overhaul of bank regulations, “preserving” the U.S. Dollar, reforming the Inflation Reduction Act and a “renaissance in American energy investment” and “free and fair” trade, a nod to the controversial tariffs backed by Trump. Bessent also has called for Trump to appoint the next Federal Reserve chairman next year, a year before the expiration of Fed chief Jerome Powell’s term. The Treasury Secretary and Fed chairman are the two most important economic policy roles in the U.S., and Trump has often jabbed at Powell, who was a Trump appointee during his first term.
Bessent said in 2015 he only stumbled into a career on Wall Street after losing an election to serve as the editor of Yale’s student newspaper. He then accepted an internship with Soros partner Jim Rogers, who offered a couch for Bessent to sleep on. Bessent said his approach to identifying investment opportunities is “to start with an abstract concept and then look at the empirical data, as a good journalist would do.”
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