Scott Bessent, US Treasury Secretary and one of the most successful global macro investors of his generation, joins Wilfred Frost in the Cash Room at the Treasury for a rare, wide-ranging conversation that bridges markets, geopolitics and public service. In a gripping real-time interruption, Secretary Bessent is called to the Situation Room by President Trump in the middle of the interview, then returns to detail the administration’s response to the Iran war and the market turmoil it is creating.
They start with the mindset that powered Bessent’s decades of outperformance at Soros Fund Management and his own firm Key Square: a healthy scepticism of elite opinion, the discipline to wait years for the right catalyst, and the ability to “imagine a different state of the world” – from betting against the ERM to riding the yen from sub-80 to 150 after spotting the policy and current-account shifts behind Abenomics. He explains how that same framework now shapes his decisions as Treasury Secretary, what it means to be “guardian of the bond market,” and why the true risk is not volatility but markets closing altogether.
On the Iranian conflict he covers the goals of degrading Iran’s military capacity, the record 400-million-barrel strategic reserve release, contingency plans for escorting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, and how he thinks about oil price spikes in terms of duration rather than level. He also sets out America’s approach to tariffs, sanctions and the “shadow banking” system, including how Section 301 is being used post–Supreme Court ruling and why private credit stresses matter only when they infect the regulated core banking system.
Along the way, Bessent reflects on the previously-special relationship with the UK, the G7’s behind-the-scenes response to the war, and whether “America first” risks becoming “America alone” in the eyes of allies. He compares the Fed and Bank of England models, discusses gold, QE and balance-sheet policy, and explains why he turned down the Fed chair job to stay at Treasury during what he calls an extraordinary moment for US dollar dominance and energy, military and technology leadership.
The episode closes with personal lessons: what lifeguarding taught him about crises and crowds, how a failed dream to edit the Yale Daily News nudged him into finance, and his core advice for investors – know your risk tolerance, stay in the game, avoid being forced to sell at the bottom, and remember that in both careers and markets “you never know what’s going to happen.”
