Presidents aren’t supposed to pick winners, former White House ethics lawyer says. Trump keeps choosing Dell

8 hours ago 2

When President Donald Trump rang the opening bell of the stock market from the Oval Office on Monday surrounded by Cabinet officials and CEOs, he thanked billionaire couple Michael and Susan Dell—standing mere feet away from him—for their contributions to his namesake investment accounts for children.

“They are truly incredible people, go out and buy a Dell computer,” Trump said. “We’re going to get him that money back one way or the other.”

Afterward, Dell shares rose as much as nearly 9% before closing up 4.4%, the third trading day since February when Trump’s public praise of Dell coincided with a same-day stock gain, raising a political and financial question: How much of Dell’s extraordinary run is Trump, and how much is just Dell being good at selling servers to companies building AI data centers?

One of the most closely followed voices in enterprise hardware thinks the answer is the hyperscalers were always going to write Dell checks for its AI servers, and a former White House ethics lawyer thinks the question is a distraction from a simpler one: Presidents aren’t supposed to pick winners to begin with. 

The pattern in question

Nine days before Trump Read Entire Article