This post was originally published on artnews.com
Citadel CEO and ARTnews Top 200 Collector Ken Griffin said the US is “eroding” its brand right now due to many of the economic policy changes being made during President Donald Trump’s first 100 days in office.
“America rose beyond being a country, it was like an aspiration for most of the world, and we’re eroding that brand right now,” Griffin said during an interview with Semafor senior editor Gina Chon during the media organization’s World Economy Summit in Washington, D.C., on April 23. The event was virtually broadcast on the social media platform X.
Griffin said that in the financial markets, no brand compared to the reputation, strength, and credit-worthiness as the US Treasuries. “We put that brand at risk,” he said. “And as you and I both know, it can take a very long time to remove the tarnish on a brand.”
Earlier this month, the implementation of new “reciprocal” tariffs prompted a large sell-off of US government bonds. While the price of the bonds fell, the rate the US government had to pay on its bonds rose, indicating lower confidence among investors in the US economy.
The Citadel CEO said the results during the President’s first 100 days have been mixed due to an “extremely extensive agenda,” the “speed for action,” and the “opportunity for missteps.”
Griffin also said the President, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick “need to be very thoughtful” and behave in a way that respects and strengthens the country’s brand, “because when you tarnish that brand, it can be a lifetime to repair the damage that has been done.”
When asked about the current tariff policies that have caused art professionals to scramble and generated volatility in global stock markets, Griffin said his biggest concern was: “How do we conduct ourselves so that we do not diminish the stature of the United States of America?”
He was not optimistic about manufacturing returning to the US, saying, “With the policy volatility, you actually undermine the very goal you’re trying to achieve.”
Griffin was clear in his support of DOGE, the Department of Government Efficiency led by Tesla CEO and unelected presidential advisor Elon Musk as part of a wider reduction in federal spending. DOGE has notably recommended extreme cuts to staff and programs at the National Endowment for the Humanities.
But when Chon asked if there was any space where there was room for optimism or opportunities, Griffin was dour in his reply. “If we were Europeans looking at our US assets, we’ve lost 20 percent of our value in four weeks. If you use the Euro as a reference currency, we’ve become 20 percent poorer in four weeks. There’s not a lot of money to be made in that environment. When the pie is rapidly shrinking, there are very few people jumping for joy.”
Last year, Griffin donated $100 million to conservatives, the fifth-largest amount for individual contributions to federal election spending, according to data released by the Federal Election Commission and analysis from Open Secrets, a nonprofit research and government transparency group based in Washington, D.C.
Griffin’s largest disclosed donations were to the Senate Leadership Fund, on four separate occasions, totaling $30 million. He also made donations totaling $15 million to the Congressional Leadership Fund, $15 million to the Keystone Renewal PAC, and $10 million to Maryland’s Future, a single-candidate super political action committee in support of Republican Larry Hogan for the US Senate.
Griffin’s contribution of $30 million to the Senate Leadership Fund was more than one-quarter (25.8 percent) of its total raised ($116.5 million), the second-largest amount raised by an outside spending organization and the largest focused on electing conservatives in the 2024 US federal election.
While Griffin is not one of the 30 Top 200 Collectors on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index who have lost billions in their net worth due to ongoing volatility in the stock markets, the New York Times did report on April 6 that Griffin “became increasingly convinced that Mr. Trump would cause tumult, said two employees not permitted to be named discussing the fund’s machinations.”