Donald Trump has unleashed total chaos on both Washington and Wall Street with a single Truth Social post announcing a 10% cap on credit card interest rates. The surprise decree, set to start January 20, has scrambled political alliances, panicked investors, and left legal experts scratching their heads. It is a masterclass in disruption, forcing every power player in America to react to Trump’s agenda.
The chaos is visible in the strange bedfellows the policy has created. Socialist Bernie Sanders and populist Josh Hawley are aligned with Trump, while the banking lobby and Elizabeth Warren are united in opposition (albeit for different reasons). The traditional lines of left vs. right have been erased, replaced by a chaotic brawl between establishment stability and populist disruption.
Wall Street hates uncertainty, and Trump has just delivered a truckload of it. Major financial associations issued a statement warning of “devastating” consequences, struggling to find a footing in a world where a Republican president declares war on interest rates. The markets are jittery, unsure if this is a real policy or a negotiation tactic.
Senator Elizabeth Warren tried to cut through the chaos by calling the announcement a “joke.” She argued that the disorder is the point—that Trump creates confusion to hide his lack of a real plan. Warren urged the public not to get distracted by the noise and to demand concrete legislation.
But for Trump, chaos is a ladder. By upending the status quo, he has seized the narrative and put himself at the center of the economic universe. As January 20 approaches, the only certainty is that the chaos is just beginning.






