The Highest Stock Market in Wartime

Donald Trump, speaking to assembled media on 25 April 2026, offered a formulation that would have once strained credulity in a presidential context. "During the war we have the highest stock market," he said. "During, you know, a war. It's not a big war for us, but it's a war." The sentence structure itself performs the rhetorical work: the war is acknowledged, contextualised, and then immediately contained — placed in parentheses, diminished, reframed as scenery.
The context matters. An active large-scale military conflict on European soil — one that has produced hundreds of thousands of casualties, displaced millions, and reshaped the architecture of transatlantic security — is being held up as a kind of macroeconomic weather. A backdrop. Something happening over there while the numbers here happen to be good.
This is not a slip. It is a pattern.
The Grammar of Distance
In the same press interaction, Trump described reverse migration — immigrants departing the United States — as "a beautiful thing." Separately, he was asked about emotional resilience under sustained pressure. His answer, delivered with apparent sincerity: "I don't have time to be depressed. You know, if you stay busy enough, maybe that works too. That's what I do."
Taken together, these three remarks — market highs during the war, reverse migration as aesthetic achievement, productive busyness as a cure for existential dread — form a coherent worldview. It is a worldview organised entirely around American measurable outcomes, with the quality of American life indexed to market indices and border statistics, and with everyone else evaluated on the basis of their utility to that index.
This publication has noted before that presidential rhetoric about international crises tends to reflect the speaker's theory of national interest. What makes the current formulation distinctive is not its nationalism — that is standard operating procedure for the office — but its explicit narrowing of interest to financial performance and its willingness to treat human catastrophe elsewhere as a non-factor in the calculation.
The Economics of Inattention
There is a second problem with the stock-market-as-proof framing. It assumes the market's performance during a war reflects anything like normal economic conditions. It does not. Federal Reserve policy, fiscal stimulus, and the particular dynamics of equity markets in an era of algorithmic trading mean that stock indices have become, at best, a lagging and distorted signal of national economic health — and at worst, a measure of risk-asset speculation rather than productive output.
The war in Europe has already reshaped defence spending across NATO members, disrupted energy supply chains, and created a refugee situation the continent has not seen since the 1990s. Whether or not it is "a big war for us" by American casualty standards, its downstream effects on European purchasing power, on NATO burden-sharing, and on the credibility of American security commitments are measurable and consequential. The market's indifference to these effects is not evidence of American invulnerability. It is evidence of a market detached from the structural realities of the world it trades in.
The Human Cost of Abstraction
When a president describes an active war as "not a big war for us," the word us does significant rhetorical work. It defines the scope of relevant human experience as American. It draws a perimeter around which lives count in the calculation of success or failure.
This framing has consequences beyond the obvious moral ones. American foreign policy credibility rests partly on the perception that the United States takes the security of its allies and partners seriously — that commitments made in treaties and summits have meaning beyond their immediate utility to domestic polling. When those commitments are rendered invisible in the dominant public communication about American priorities, allies take note. Adversaries take note. The gap between what the United States says in private to its partners and what its leader says in public to the American electorate is itself a signal, and it is not a reassuring one.
What the Stakes Actually Are
The trajectory implied by this rhetoric — a foreign policy organised around American equity indices and migration figures, with everything else subordinated to those metrics — would, if sustained, alter the terms on which the United States operates in the world. The dollar's role as reserve currency depends not just on economic fundamentals but on the perception that American institutions are reliable and that American commitments have meaning. A foreign policy that openly frames allied security as incidental to market performance erodes that perception incrementally.
The war in Europe is not an abstraction for the millions of people living through displacement, loss, and destruction. It is also not an abstraction for the European governments that have spent two years reorienting their defence industries and fiscal priorities around a threat they once hoped was contained. When the president of the United States calls it "not a big war for us," those governments hear something specific: that American backing, whatever its formal structure, is conditional on domestic metrics remaining favourable.
That is a legible message. Whether it is a wise one is a separate question.