Why the Pentagon Is Hiring Wall Street Bankers | Prof G Markets
The Trump administration is launching an unprecedented experiment in economic statecraft: a 30-person investment banking unit inside the Pentagon tasked with deploying up to $200 billion in three years. The goal is to counter Chinese military advantage by buying stakes in private companies across minerals, drones, and energy — sectors historically owned by the private sector. Meanwhile, Trump has just collected what may be the largest M&A fee in history: a $10 billion cut of the TikTok deal, seventy percent of the platform's reported valuation. Are we witnessing the birth of an American sovereign wealth fund, or is the government becoming «dumb money» for a private equity industry desperate to offload trillions in unsold assets?
Punti chiave
The Pentagon is building a 30-person investment banking unit to deploy up to $200 billion over three years into sectors like mineral extraction, drones, and energy, explicitly to prevent China from gaining military superiority.
The Trump administration collected a $10 billion fee for brokering the TikTok deal — roughly 70% of the platform's reported $14 billion valuation and potentially the largest M&A fee in history.
Private equity firms are sitting on $3–4 trillion in unsold assets due to sluggish IPO and M&A markets, raising concerns that the Pentagon could become «dumb money» if it overpays for portfolios the private sector won't buy.
This investment push, combined with inflows from trade deals and asset sales, appears to be laying the groundwork for a de facto American sovereign wealth fund — despite the U.S. lacking the oil reserves or budget surpluses that typically justify such vehicles.
Trump's sons have invested in a Pentagon-contracted drone company now going public, and the administration is offering equity stakes in companies to investors who help fund national security priorities, blurring lines between public interest and private gain.
In breve
Trump is transforming the federal government into an investor, broker, and dealmaker — recruiting Wall Street talent to deploy hundreds of billions into private companies while collecting unprecedented fees. Whether this represents strategic national security investment or crony capitalism at industrial scale remains the defining question.
The Pentagon's Wall Street Recruitment Drive
Defense department building 30-person banker unit to deploy $200 billion.
The Pentagon is recruiting investment bankers for a new 30-person economic defense unit tasked with deploying as much as $200 billion over the next three years. The money will target sectors vital to national security: mineral extraction, drones, and energy. According to the government's pitch, the goal is to prevent China from gaining military superiority. To lure top talent, the Pentagon is offering high salaries, access to foreign contacts, and the chance to manage «more capital than most investors deploy in their entire careers».
The unit is explicitly seeking «coverage bankers» — the Wall Street professionals who know what private equity firms own and what they might be willing to sell. The defense department already holds stakes in 12 to 15 private companies, primarily to ensure domestic supply of critical materials and to provide financing the private sector won't. The new unit would dramatically scale that activity, essentially turning the Pentagon into an active dealmaker in the private markets.
The initiative comes as private equity firms sit on a historic backlog of unsold assets — an estimated $3 to $4 trillion worth of companies they've been unable to exit due to sluggish IPO and M&A markets. That raises a key risk: the Pentagon could become «dumb money», overpaying for portfolios the private sector has rejected. Bringing in bankers who speak the language of Wall Street should theoretically help avoid that outcome, but the sheer scale of capital and the political pressures involved make this a high-stakes experiment in economic statecraft.
A Sovereign Wealth Fund in All But Name
Trade deals and asset sales are creating trillion-dollar investment pool.
A Sovereign Wealth Fund in All But Name
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has talked openly about «monetizing the national balance sheet». Between trade deals with Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan; tariff revenue; plans to take Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac public; and possible privatization of the postal service, the Trump administration is assembling what could be a trillion-dollar investment vehicle. That's the size of the world's largest sovereign wealth funds — Saudi Arabia's and Norway's. The difference: those countries have oil reserves and budget surpluses. The U.S. has debt.
How Government Became the Broker
Trump administration collects $10 billion fee on TikTok deal.
The Trump administration is set to collect what may be the largest M&A fee in history: $10 billion for brokering the TikTok deal. That fee will be paid by the investors who took control of TikTok's U.S. operations, including Oracle, MGX, and Silver Lake. The group has already deposited $2.5 billion into the U.S. Treasury, with further payments to follow until the total hits $10 billion. To put that in perspective, the biggest M&A advisory fee ever disclosed was $130 million — paid to Bank of America for advising Norfolk Southern.
The fee structure is unusual, if not unprecedented. Congress effectively banned TikTok unless a sale to a U.S. investor group occurred. The government then had to approve the deal to satisfy national security concerns and prevent the app from going dark. Critics argue the administration leveraged that approval process to extract a massive payment — raising the question of whether the government was paid to say yes. The optics are further complicated by TikTok's reported valuation of $14 billion, which analysts say is significantly below the platform's actual worth. If the real value is closer to $24 billion (valuation plus fee), or higher, the deal may have been structured to benefit insiders at a discount.
Key Numbers
The financial scale of Trump's economic defense strategy.
Conflicts of Interest and Political Favoritism
«You Have to Worry About Adverse Selection»
Wall Street observer warns Pentagon could become dumb money.
“Private equity firms are sitting on an epic historic backlog of companies that they have been unable to sell — something like three or four trillion dollars worth of stuff sitting in their portfolios because the IPO market has been sluggish. They are desperate to offload this to somebody and you have to worry a little bit if you're the Pentagon that you become the dumb money here.”
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