Elon Musk Stays Mum On Tariff Chaos As His Fortune Drops

On any number of Donald Trump’s policies, from mass deportations of undocumented immigrants to challenging federal judges who rule against his executive orders, Elon Musk has the president’s back. Over the last few months, as the world’s richest man has worked to gut the federal bureaucracy as head of Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, he has defended the president’s agenda at every turn on X to his 218 million followers.

But when it comes to Donald Trump’s most significant policy to date – the broad-based tariffs program unveiled earlier this week, which applies a baseline 10% levy on every country plus additional tariffs for countries with larger trade deficits with the U.S. – Musk has almost nothing to say.

At the Wednesday evening Rose Garden event where Trump announced the new tariffs to press and members of his administration, including cabinet members like Vice President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Musk was nowhere to be found. While Trump was behind the podium and holding aloft his huge cardboard sheet outline the ‘reciprocal’ tariffs his administration is imposing against various countries, Musk was retweeting a guy with 780 followers talking about how his buddy with a boat has good internet on the boat thanks to Starlink, the satellite internet service provider controlled by Musk’s company SpaceX.

Financial market chaos ensued the next 36 hours, with investors panicking over the growing likelihood of a U.S. recession, wiping out $2.4 trillion in stock market value from the S&P 500 during yesterday’s trading session – the biggest one-day decline since March 2020 – yet the loquacious Musk had nothing to say about the most pressing story of the day. He was too busy retweeting the Department of The Interior boosting a national park in California, reposting a video that purports to show prominent Democratic politicians doing the Nazi salute, mocking U.S. Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer, and retweeting posts boosting Starlink and SpaceX. From the beginning of this week until now, Musk has authored just one tweet referencing Trump’s tariffs—and it was a retweet of another account.

It’s possible that Musk, who is becoming increasingly unpopular with Americans (60% view him unfavorably according to a new poll), simply wants to avoid attaching himself to an unpopular plank of Trump’s policy agenda; after all, global Tesla sales were already declining, due largely to consumer backlash to Musk’s role in the Trump’s administration. It’s also possible that Trump, conscious of Musk’s broader unpopularity, doesn’t want the tycoon associated with his policy (which could help explain Musk’s exclusion from the Rose Garden event) or, which has been reported, that Musk is on his way out from DOGE. Above all, what seems certain is that Musk, a pioneering businessman who built his global empire with the help of free trade policies, understands that the tariffs are self-defeating and that the ensuing economic chaos will negatively affect his own companies and their bottom lines.

The tycoon has already acknowledged as much in the case of Tesla. The electric automaker is better positioned than its domestic rivals to cope with the tariffs, since its gigafactories in Austin and California produce all of the Teslas sold to American consumers. Tesla however still relies on global supply chains for the raw materials that go into its vehicles. “Important to note that Tesla is NOT unscathed here,” Musk tweeted last week, referring to Trump’s auto tariffs. “The tariff impact on Tesla is still significant.” The new tariffs are “a debacle of epic proportions for the whole auto industry including Tesla,” Dan Ives, global head of technology research for Wedbush Securities, said to Forbes via email. “Economic Armageddon.”

Tesla’s stock has fallen 14% over the last two days (as of Friday afternoon), since Trump announced the tariffs on Wednesday evening. Musk’s fortune is down over $40 billion since its peak of over $400 billion in late December. (It would be even higher if Musk hadn’t added $33 billion to his net worth by merging X with xAI last week).

Musk’s second largest business, SpaceX, the rocketmaker that enjoys huge U.S. government contracts and runs the satellite internet company Starlink, is also likely to get burned by Trump’s tariffs, because it sources satellite components and network gear from abroad. Taiwanese firm Wistron NeWeb Corporation, a major SpaceX supplier, began producing routers and other network gear for Starlink at a factory in Vietnam last year, while other SpaceX suppliers – including Taiwanese manufacturers Universal Microwave Technology, Shenmao Technology, and Chin-Poon Industrial – have also begun moving some of their operations in Vietnam and Thailand, following a request from SpaceX over concerns of geopolitical risk, according to a Reuters report last November.

Vietnam and Thailand are among the hardest hit countries by Trump’s tariffs, with each facing 46% and 36% levies, respectively. Even the SpaceX suppliers that kept their operations in Taiwan will be heavily taxed—U.S. imports from Taiwan now face a 32% tariff. The tariffs on Vietnam, in particular, may disrupt a critical investment that SpaceX has been planning. Government officials in Vietnam said last September that SpaceX was planning to make a $1.5 billion investment in the country, though the purpose and progress of that investment is not clear.

SpaceX, which is among the most valuable privately held U.S. companies, is seeing its valuation dip. According to Notice, a secondary market data provider, SpaceX’s shares have fallen 12% this week and over 23% year to date, pushing its valuation to around $290 billion. Investors valued SpaceX at above $350 billion at the beginning of this year.

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

The war in Iran: is Trump ‘on the run’?

As Donald Trump’s war wears on, it becomes increasingly clear that he has no “overarching strategy” and is now fighting a war of attrition, said The Guardian. America is still striking at Iranian targets while building up troops in the region. Iran, in turn, keeps attacking Israel and the Gulf states. Last week, it hit

As Jeff Bezos ‘celebrates’ post on first-ever purchase made on Amazon, Elon Musk replies, says: It was start of …

Jon Erlichman, BNN Bloomberg contributor and the host of Ticker Take, a YouTube channel dedicated to investing and financial literacy recently shared photos of Amazon’s first non-employee purchase. The X post included original packing slip and Douglas Hofstadter’s “Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies,” a book exploring AI and computer models of thought. “On this day

Trump orders DHS to pay all employees despite shutdown

President Trump on Friday ordered the Department of Homeland Security to find a way to pay “each and every employee” of the agency, which has faced an almost two-month-long shutdown due to a congressional impasse, leaving thousands without paychecks.  The president’s memo directs DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin and Office of Management and Budget Director Russell

Warren Buffett Maintains Active Role at Berkshire Hathaway

Got story updates? Submit your updates here. › Despite stepping away from day-to-day operations, Warren Buffett’s guiding hand remains firmly on the wheel at Berkshire Hathaway.Omaha Today Despite stepping down as Berkshire Hathaway’s CEO a few months ago, Warren Buffett is not easing into retirement. The 95-year-old investing icon still drives into Berkshire’s Omaha headquarters

Celebrities at Women’s Final Four

April 3, 2026, 7:43 p.m. ET USA TODAY Sports is providing live coverage of the Women’s Final Four match between the No. 1 UConn Huskies and No. 1 South Carolina Gamecocks at the Mortgage Matchup Center. Follow along here. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame artist Flavor Flav is sitting courtside at the Mortgage Matchup

Trump Cabinet worries no one is safe after Bondi and Noem firings

When President Donald Trump ousted his attorney general, Pam Bondi, it sent a clear message to his remaining Cabinet members: The job security they’ve enjoyed until now is no longer guaranteed. Trump has grown increasingly willing to fire top officials who he believes are underperforming, amid deepening frustration with his declining approval ratings and fears

Executive order aims to limit NCAA athletes to 5 years, 1 transfer

Dan MurphyApr 3, 2026, 05:17 PM ET Close Covers the Big Ten Joined ESPN.com in 2014 Graduate of the University of Notre Dame Multiple Authors President Donald Trump signed an executive order Friday designed to limit how long athletes can play college sports and how often they can transfer between schools. The order states that

Lauren Sánchez ‘trying to step out’ of husband Jeff Bezos’ ‘shadow’

Lauren Sánchez and Jeff Bezos‘ 10-month marriage is already showing glaring signs of mutual frustration, with the brunette beauty now dropping not-so-subtle hints she “doesn’t need” her billionaire hubby, Wonderwall.com can reveal. The former TV news anchor, 56, openly demanded that Bezos, 62, leave her alone to pose solo on the red carpet at the

Olivia Dean opens up about social media break, deleting apps

April 3, 2026, 3:34 p.m. ET Following a monumental Grammy win, Olivia Dean says she took a step back from social media, which included deleting apps from her phone. The London-born rising star touched on the lifestyle change after the big night in a cover story with ELLE, released on April 2. “I’ve been thinking

Big-Name Celebrities Headed to Astronomicon 9 in Ypsilanti

Got story updates? Submit your updates here. › Astronomicon 9 promises a star-studded lineup of celebrity guests and fan-favorite entertainment in Ypsilanti.Ypsilanti Today Astronomicon 9, a popular pop culture convention featuring celebrities from TV, movies, horror, music, and wrestling, is coming to the Ann Arbor Marriott in Ypsilanti, Michigan from April 10-12, 2026. The event

Selena Gomez and Olivia Rodrigo Wear Girly Pink Minidresses on Same Day

THE RUNDOWN Both Selena Gomez and Olivia Rodrigo wore girly pink minidresses with contrasting white accents yesterday. Rodrigo had on a Peter Pan-collared dress for her third album’s cover art. Gomez, meanwhile, chose a satin-pink Prada minidress for Rare Beauty’s event that evening. Just hours after Olivia Rodrigo released the cover art for her third

Bernie Sanders calls out Bezos, Musk, Bloomberg and Buffett in billionaire tax push

As wealth taxes gain momentum from Sacramento to Washington state, Sen. Bernie Sanders says 938 people stand between most working Americans and a $3,000 check. In a scathing op-ed published Wednesday in The Guardian, the Vermont senator named every name and put every number on the table. “The richest people in America have never ever

Megan Thee Stallion returns to ‘Moulin Rouge’ after major health scare

April 3, 2026, 11:27 a.m. ET Megan Thee Stallion is back in the building. After the Houston-born rapper took a brief hiatus from her run on Broadway’s “Moulin Rouge! The Musical,” following a medical scare, she returned to the stage Thursday, April 2. Megan has taken on the role of Zidler in the beloved production,

US soldiers more pro-Nato than Trump, but Europe can deter Putin alone – EUobserver

American soldiers are more pro-Nato than US president Donald Trump, but if he quit the alliance, European forces could still deter Russia, two former Nato insiders have said. “They [US soldiers] would obey if an order came to pull back, but it’s certainly not something they would concur with … they don’t share president Trump’s

Chinese Politburo member Ma Xingrui under investigation

BEIJING (Reuters )– Ma Xingrui, a member of China’s elite Politburo, is under investigation over suspected “serious violation of law and discipline”, becoming the latest senior Chinese leader to fall under the anti-graft watchdog’s scrutiny. China is stepping up its years-long fight to root out corruption with the purge of sitting members of the Politburo,

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x