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Trump, 50 yıllık mortgage'i güçlendiriyor! Morgan Stanley Dimon ve BlackRock'u "Beyaz Saray gizli toplantısına" davet ediyor, Wall Street'ten yardım istiyor.

Trump, after the Republican Party's defeat in three major local elections, invited Wall Street executives to a White House dinner, seeking to use financial power to reduce inflation and refocus public attention on mortgage and living costs. (Background: Trump counters public opinion: paying a 50-year mortgage is a trivial matter; what's wrong with lower monthly payments?) (Supplementary background: After 43 days of government shutdown, the U.S. government restarts! Trump signs the bill at midnight: Democrats and Biden cost the U.S. $1.5 trillion.) Last night (12th), the White House state dining room was brilliantly lit. President Donald Trump, after setbacks in the midterm elections, rarely held a small closed-door dinner, inviting heavyweight figures from Wall Street, including JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon and Blackstone founder Steve Schwarzman, to discuss not stock price fluctuations but whether American families can continue to afford mortgages and living expenses. Wall Street gathered at the White House, with mortgage pain points becoming the focus. Accompanying the dinner were Treasury Secretary Scott Basset, from a hedge fund background, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who has worked on Wall Street. Facing the burden of mortgage interest caused by rising federal funding rates in recent years, Trump requested the attending executives to provide “immediate actionable” solutions, hoping to cool public grievances in a short time. For the financial sector, this was a rare opportunity to re-establish high-level communications with the government; for the White House, it was a declaration to prioritize “affordability” at the top of the national economic agenda, as Trump had mentioned the 50-year mortgage issue just the day before. After the electoral defeat, Trump urgently changed his messaging strategy. The Republican Party recently lost key seats in local elections in Virginia, New York, and New Jersey, and voter dissatisfaction with inflation and rising prices is evident. Trump candidly stated at the banquet that in the past, the economic information delivery “did not resonate with the public.” Therefore, he chose to break with the previous President Biden's approach of keeping distance from financial elites, directly courting Wall Street, and reshaping the governance narrative through the capital market's voice. He told the executives that as long as they could reduce the burden on Americans, any policy options could be renegotiated, with several financial insiders privately describing his urgent tone as “campaign mode fully engaged.” Financial leaders proposed investment and regulatory suggestions. JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon briefed on the bank's $1.5 trillion investment plan, targeting defense, energy, and manufacturing, emphasizing that “flowing funds into the real economy is the long-term solution to curb inflation.” This complements Trump's emphasized supply chain repatriation policy. Other executives suggested relaxing leverage restrictions on hedge funds and banks, advocating that ample capital can accelerate corporate expansion. Trump also asked attendees to provide a White Paper on mortgage subprime market liquidity, tax relief for first-time homebuyers, and regulatory easing, and predicted that “as long as consensus is formed, executive orders can be signed quickly.” After the dinner, some invitees accompanied Trump into the Oval Office to witness him sign the bill ending the government shutdown, symbolizing the government's determination to maintain stability with the capital market. The tug-of-war between livelihood and capital, subsequent observation points. Trump's actions are seen as a prelude to the policy tone of his second term: wrapped in the guise of public needs, with Wall Street resources as the backbone, achieving the dual expectations of voters and the market through regulatory relaxation and investment encouragement. However, balancing “making money cheaper” and “preventing financial risks” is not to be underestimated. If mortgage rate subsidies or tax policies progress too quickly, it may drive housing prices to soar again; if regulatory easing is excessive, it will also raise concerns about systemic risks. For financial giants, deepening dialogue can ensure that their interests are included in policy design; for ordinary families, the real key lies in whether they can see actual declines in mortgage rates and wage growth catching up with prices in the coming quarters. It is certain that this dinner is only the prologue, and the interaction between the White House and Wall Street will become more frequent and focused on the core issue of “where money should flow.” Various sectors will continue to examine whether the policies genuinely lead to alleviating mortgage burdens and stabilizing prices, rather than once again causing a divergence between capital and livelihood. Faced with mortgage pressure and inflation shadows, the U.S. government and the financial sector are already tied to the same rope. The White House dinner reveals an economic roadmap centered on affordability and driven by Wall Street investment. In the next four years, how to balance the welfare of the people and market vitality will be the most important indicator to test Trump's success or failure in his second term. Related Reports: Trump calls for “$2000 per person universal distribution”: only idiots oppose tariffs; U.S. Treasury Secretary astonished: haven't discussed this with me. Mortgages more expensive than housing prices! China's housing market erupts in “mortgage inversion” wave, selling homes to pay off loans yet needing to subsidize. The central bank responds: “open the mortgage tap” hides hawkish messages: housing exchange grace period extended to 18 months; insists on not loosening new green concentration? <Trump pushes for 50-year mortgages! Invites JPMorgan's Dimon and BlackRock to “White House secret meeting” to ask Wall Street for help> This article was first published in BlockTempo, the most influential blockchain news media.

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