Opinion
Guest
Essay
Trump Is
Pushing Us Toward a Crash. It Could Be 1929 All Over Again.
Nov. 7,
2025
By
William A. Birdthistle
Mr.
Birdthistle served as director of the Division of Investment Management at the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission from 2021 to 2024.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/07/opinion/donald-trump-great-gatsby-roating-20s-sec.html
President
Trump’s Halloween party at Mar-a-Lago, set to the theme of “The Great Gatsby,”
re-enacted the decadence of that story’s licentious era: befeathered flappers
shimmying in the crowd; gilded and onyx décor; scantily clad women posing in an
enormous champagne coupe. The revelatory moment says so much about where we
stand today — and what we could be lurching into next.
Published
a century ago, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby” captured the culture of
an overheated economy on the brink of demise. Just as Jay Gatsby fell from the
height of fortune to an ignominious death, the 1920s roared with financial
overindulgence until the markets drowned in the Wall Street crash of 1929. The
Great Depression followed, and the consequences for the global economy proved
calamitous.
Today we
find ourselves again dancing toward new highs in the stock market. Speculative
money is once more pouring into risky investment schemes, with staggering sums
of money being thrown at artificial intelligence and cryptocurrencies. But
rather than heed a century of hard-won lessons, the Trump administration’s
financial regulators are embracing dissolute policies to keep the punch
flowing.
The
financial excesses of 100 years ago teach us how high the costs of negligent
oversight of our markets can be. When sentinels sleep, fraudsters flourish;
their frenzied celebration of unreal profits pumps froth into the market;
ultimately, with panic and pain, bubbles will burst. As stages of that cycle
are recurring, we must decide whether to intervene now — or to mop up the mess
later.
The
parallels between the 1920s and the 2020s are numerous — and ominous. The 1920s
economy boomed while America recovered from a deadly pandemic, the flu of 1918.
Americans used installment plans — the precursor to today’s ubiquitous “buy
now, pay later” plans at online checkouts — to spend liberally on consumer
products, and they poured money into speculative new investments. Automobile
and telephone stocks were the high-flying tech investments of their day; Tesla
and Apple are two of ours.
The
prevailing interest rate was around 5 percent, as it is today. And as with
today, masses of Americans took advantage of easy credit and ubiquitous stock
brokerages to speculate in finance. In 1929, a New York Times editor quoted a
major newspaper’s financial expert who said that the “huge army that daily
gambles in the stock market” had come to include, in the editor’s words, “the
woman nonprofessional speculator,” whose share of market trading grew by one
estimate from less than 2 percent to 35 percent. That influx of buying from
1919 to 1929 drove the stock market up more than sixfold over the decade — a
growth rate our market has actually surpassed over the past three years.
Nick
Carraway, the narrator of “The Great Gatsby,” was a bond salesman. Today he
might work for a crypto exchange or Robinhood, the popular app that allows
neophytes to bet on financial options like a game on their smartphones.
Robinhood makes a good deal of money from the interest its users pay to borrow
money to buy yet more investments. Investing on margin, as this practice is
known, was a major source of the surge that drove markets to perilous heights
in the 1920s. And when stocks began to fall, margin calls — the demands for
loans to be repaid by selling the stocks, if necessary — were a major
accelerant of the crash.
In the
’20s, America did not have any federal securities regulators, offering
irresistible temptations to charlatans.
It was
the era of Charles Ponzi, whose last name became synonymous with the classic
pyramid scheme in which outlandish returns are delivered only by pilfering the
funds of new investors. Today’s analogous innovation is the cryptocurrency “rug
pull,” in which investors are lured by stories of stratospheric returns on new
tokens, only to be left with little or nothing when the promoters disappear
with the assets.
Without
federal rules to force financial advisers to disclose essential facts about
their offerings, they could easily dupe mom-and-pop investors into buying
worthless investments at inflated prices. Another racket involved advisers
buying a stock, directing their fund to invest in it and profiting from its
rise in price. A rising tide lifted even the least seaworthy financial tubs.
Ultimately,
the unsustainable cannot be sustained. Between 1929 and 1932, the stock market
dropped 77 percent, and the global economy staggered into the Great Depression
while unemployment and malnutrition spiked. In 1932, suicide rates soared to
their highest in recorded history.
Financial
failure on such a massive scale taught America important lessons, including the
need for prudent regulation. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who swept into the
presidency with 472 of 531 electoral votes and a mandate to launch his New
Deal, signed waves of legislation to restore confidence in the American
financial system, including the securities laws that created federal rules and
an agency — the Securities and Exchange Commission — dedicated to their
enforcement.
The chief
mandate of those rules was to ensure that anyone soliciting investment from the
public told the world about their operations — and was held responsible if they
omitted crucial information or materially misstated the facts. Any companies
that chose not to release such information would have to limit their pitch to
small numbers of investors or to sophisticated investors who could fend for
themselves. This policy has worked spectacularly well for decades, pulling
America’s capital markets out of the smoldering ruins of devastation to become
the largest, deepest and most efficient in the world.
Four
years ago, the economist Robert Shiller expressed concern about the stock
market’s lofty heights, but he concluded that there was “no particular reason”
to expect a market collapse “as bad as the 1929 crash” because “the government
and the Fed have shown themselves to be far more adept in staving off prolonged
recessions than their predecessors.” Today, with the S&P 500 over 60
percent higher than it was the day Mr. Shiller issued his warning, we should be
heeding the words of the former Federal Reserve chairman William McChesney
Martin, who warned that market stewards must be willing to serve as the
“chaperone” who can order “the punch bowl removed just when the party was
really warming up.”
Mr. Trump
has been ordering the chaperones removed. Since January, his administration has
been firing regulators and vigorously tearing down the guardrails that have
kept our markets thriving for nine decades.
For the
first time in a century, the S.E.C. is seriously exploring how to allow firms
and funds to sell investments to masses of Americans without registration or
disclosure. The administration is even encouraging individual retirees to
vouchsafe their life savings to exotic financial offerings like private equity.
Private equity is, as the name suggests, notoriously opaque, which means
retirees would know little about what they’re investing in. The White House and
the private fund lobby argue that this policy will “democratize” access to
alternative assets and promote “better returns.” But such a plan, which comes
with neither the information nor the protections needed to defend investors
from serious economic risks, is as compelling as a plan to “democratize” brain
surgery.
Mr. Trump
is also allowing financial regulators to atrophy: The five-person Commodity
Futures Trading Commission, tasked by this administration to oversee
significant portions of the crypto and prediction markets, has dwindled to a
single member. Only two of five statutorily mandated S.E.C. commissioners are
serving in their normal terms; the lone remaining Democratic appointee,
Caroline Crenshaw, is in her post-expiration grace period, and warning that the
agency’s policies are “a reckless game of regulatory Jenga.”
The
agency’s chair has declared “a new day at the S.E.C.” But the lamps are going
out all over the agency: Staff has been cut by 16 percent (substantially more
than the 10 percent of a literal decimation), quarterly reports are on the
chopping block and forms that provide intelligence about dark corners of the
market are being repeatedly deferred.
Meanwhile,
Mr. Trump is relentlessly browbeating the Federal Reserve to lower interest
rates. That could also, as it did in the 1920s, overstimulate an already-lofty
stock market. And all that money chasing too few goods is what leads to
inflation — a problem that takes longer to develop and is devastating when it
arrives. Mr. Trump may no longer be president when that bill comes due. For
now, his administration is stamping on the gas while turning off the
headlights.And as Fitzgerald warned us in the climactic scene of “The Great
Gatsby,” terrible consequences come from automobile accidents in the gathering
darkness.
Mr. Trump
may want to take a moment to recall that neither the novel nor the 1920s ended
well. Wise rules are a source of abundance. Well-regulated systems attract
users, just as well-regulated markets attract investors. This administration
professes to be so concerned about lawlessness that it is deploying troops to
confront American citizens in our own cities, while it removes the constables
patrolling our financial markets. The U.S. capital markets became the world’s
largest not despite regulation, but because of it.
William
Birdthistle is a law professor at the University of Chicago Law School and
served as director of the Division of Investment Management at the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission from 2021 to 2024.


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