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In today’s edition, dollar diplomacy is key to the Saudi Arabia-sponsored investment conference in M͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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February 20, 2025
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Liz Hoffman
Liz Hoffman

Hi from Miami, where dollar diplomacy is the order of the day.

President Donald Trump spoke at a Saudi Arabia-sponsored investment conference here yesterday, and in between his opener — listing prominent Trump buildings in the city — and shimmying offstage to YMCA, he delivered a star-spangled endorsement of American exceptionalism. “There’s no better place on Earth than the current and future United States of America under a certain president named Donald J. Trump.”

He called Saudi Arabia “a very special place” but wasn’t overly gracious. He promised to unleash US oil and gas, which will hurt the Saudis’ efforts to keep prices up. He didn’t take the opportunity to walk back his plan to take over Gaza, which has infuriated Gulf countries. He repeatedly called the head of Saudi’s sovereign wealth fund by his first name, rather than “His Excellency.” Trump did seat the Saudi ambassador next to Elon Musk, so by the “proximity to Elon Musk” theory of valuation, the kingdom did well.

But at a time when what Saudi Arabia really wants is foreign investment into its economy, Trump remained a taker, not a giver. Illustrating the point in human form was Jared Kushner, who raised $2 billion from the Saudi government for his private-equity fund but has yet to make a public investment into a Saudi company.

Speaking of people not getting what they want out of Trump… The head of the Federal Trade Commission reaffirmed the tough antitrust merger rules enacted by his predecessor, Lina Khan.

More on that in today’s newsletter, plus time to call the top: Companies are talking about stock buybacks again.

Buy/Sell

➚ BUY: Little Boxes. Apple unveiled a new entry-level iPhone, the 16e, that can run its latest AI tools just like top-end models. But the big news, as usual, is what’s inside — Apple’s first in-house modem, an expensive and long-awaited R&D win meant to ease its reliance on Qualcomm.

➘ SELL: Big Box. Weak sales guidance from Walmart prompted fresh worries about consumer demand. The company’s outlook didn’t take into account tariff headwinds, meaning the picture could be gloomier still. Walmart’s stock slipped 6%, sparking smaller selloffs in Target and Costco shares Thursday morning.

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The Tape

Quantum dreams inch closer… Forever 21 nears Chapter 22 filing… Hedge fund talent war mints $100M contract…Trump appointees double-dip (Rubio runs national archives)…

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Strange Bedfellows
US Vice President JD Vance addresses the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland.
Nathan Howard/Reuters

The FTC’s reaffirmation of Biden-era merger rules should dispel Wall Street’s hopes Trump would usher in a dealmaking boom.

“Rewriting guidelines after every election would be destabilizing,” FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson said. “Enforcement agencies should avoid a wholesale change in guidelines with every new administration… Firms must be able to make plans without worrying that guidelines are tossed away every four years. Courts will not rely on guidelines that are transparently partisan either.”

Wholesale, destabilizing, and transparently partisan rewriting of guidelines in ways that worry constituents and undermine courts is Trump’s whole bit! In their enthusiasm for Trump, corporate executives have focused on the things he says that they like (deregulation, lower taxes) and dismissed ones they don’t as bluffs (trade wars, immigration crackdown, inflationary policies, politically motivated investigations). A likely outcome here is that corporate America gets all of the destabilizing, norm-shattering Trump they feared and none of the destabilizing, norm-shattering Trump they wanted.

Vice President JD Vance and “Khanservative” allies like Sen. Josh Hawley are as suspicious of big business as progressives are, and antitrust enforcement is a topic where the horseshoe theory of politics holds — where the far left and far right tend to agree. Trump’s merger cops holding to Biden’s agenda shows that even Big Tech’s cozying up to the administration may not have changed their mind toward corporate power.

Ferguson’s comments are “a reaffirmation that what we actually did is innately conservative,” said Josh Tzuker, who was chief of staff to Jonathan Kanter, the Justice Department’s head of antitrust under Biden.

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Timing is Everything
A chart showing how many times the word buybacks was mentioned in company transcript between 2005 and 2025.
Morgan Stanley Research

Companies are talking about buybacks again, after a post-2020 drop in CEOs’ favorite stock-price-boosting trick. Mentions of share repurchases during company earnings calls are up roughly 30% since the second quarter of 2024, according to Morgan Stanley research.

But if the past is any guide, they’ll execute them badly. Companies should be the smartest buyers of their own shares — they know more than their investors do — but often manage to buy at the top and sell (issue new shares) at the bottom: Buybacks peaked as a percentage of total market size in 2007 and surged again just before the 2020 crash. To be fair, companies tend to have cash to deploy when things are good and need cash when things are bad, but buybacks at those peaks and troughs are remarkably inefficient. Renewed chatter now comes as worries grow about a market crash.

A chart showing the S&P 500 constituent buybacks as a percentage of market value.
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Soft Power
US Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent speaks during a joint news briefing with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a Bloomberg TV interview that the US would consider lifting Russia sanctions if needed. It’s a sharp about-face from his confirmation hearing, where he said he “100%” supported stronger sanctions on Russian oil and criticized the Biden administration for putting the political need for cheaper energy above national interests.

Peace talks between Trump and Russia — without Ukraine or European allies at the table — could lay the groundwork for easing restrictions on Russia. But shares of Rheinmetall, the German defense contractor at the heart of much of Ukraine’s armament, are up 20% over the last week, even as investors expect some easing of tensions.

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Reality Distortion Fields
A Starbucks storefront in London.
Hollie Adams/File Photo/Reuters

Bosses still believe in a return to a fully in-person world. Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol is pushing a return to Starbucks’ “third place” roots, telling The Wall Street Journal that mobile ordering is a double-edged sword and a distraction. Meanwhile, JPMorgan chief Jamie Dimon went mildly viral for a leaked rant, obtained by Barron’s, against remote slackers. “Don’t give me this shit,” he said. “I call a lot of people on Fridays, and there’s not a goddamn person you can get a hold of.” Trump has ordered most federal employees back to the office five days a week and red state governors are following suit.

Unions are pushing back, and low unemployment has given new muscle to private-sector workers, half of whom told Pew Research last fall that they would quit if ordered back to the office full-time.

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Making Business Great Again

Semafor is keeping tabs on the business community’s MAGA shift and the Trump administration’s crackdown on corporate diversity efforts. The news is coming fast, and we’ll bring you updates in each newsletter.

American exceptionalism exceptions: The shine is off some core MAGA trades. The S&P 500 is lagging peer benchmarks in Europe, China, and even Mexico, despite threatened tariffs against those regions. The dollar and US bond yields are falling too. Only Bitcoin still has its Trump bump.

Keep Canada great: A $15 billion Canadian trucking company is redomiciling to the US, reuniting Trump with a fan base cultivated during Covid protest convoys. Quebec’s giant pension fund room sharply criticized the move. The president’s America-first agenda has stirred patriotic backlash in Canada; support for PM Justin Trudeau has even stabilized as some voters worry right-wing populist candidate Pierre Poilievre might fold on tariffs.

Companies like the trucking giant, TFI, which gets 70% of its revenue from the US, will face similar choices over the coming years. London has been losing listings of multinational firms to New York, where valuations (and executive pay) are better, and a strong American economy and business-friendly climate could peel others away from Europe’s struggling continental exchanges.

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Semafor Spotlight
A great read from Semafor Technology.Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong.
David Swanson/Reuters

Coinbase, the largest US cryptocurrency exchange and one of the industry’s top political donors, outlined its legislative priorities in a blueprint first reported by Semafor’s Eleanor Mueller.

The blueprint could be an influential roadmap for Washington as the industry transitions from being a regulatory target under the Biden administration to an embraced sector under President Trump.

A major change proposed by Coinbase would be to shift oversight of crypto spot trading to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission because the firm considers Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other similar digital assets to be commodities instead of securities.

Subscribe to Semafor Tech, a twice weekly briefing on the people, the money and the ideas in AI and technology. →

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