The Strategist: He Spent 30 Years Reading the World’s Capital Flows. Now He Controls Them.

Scott Bessent spent three decades doing one thing: reading macro environments for profit before the market saw them coming.
He tracked capital flows across borders. He traded political transitions as leading indicators. In 2013, he identified that Japan was about to launch the most aggressive monetary stimulus in its history — before most macro funds had positioned — shorted the yen, and made $1.2 billion in three months.
Now he runs the U.S. Treasury.
The framework has not changed. The instruments have. Where he once positioned a hedge fund, he now positions the U.S. dollar, the tariff architecture, and the fiscal strategy of the world's largest economy. He is the moderating layer between political instinct and market stability — the most market-literate Treasury Secretary in modern American history, operating at the intersection of geopolitics, capital flows, and sovereign economic power.
And now that Kevin Warsh is confirmed as Federal Reserve Chair, the alignment Bessent described publicly — "let Warsh lead the next cycle" — is operational. For the first time in history, Treasury and the Fed share the same mentor, the same framework, and decades of intellectual alignment. The coordination risk has collapsed. The concentration risk has risen. Both matter for where capital moves next.

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