Uncle Sam is outperforming the S&P 500

Uncle Sam is outperforming the S&P 500

Uncle Sam is outperforming the S&P 500

The US government has taken equity stakes in publicly traded companies, including Intel and MP Materials. - NDZ/STAR MAX/IPx/AP
The US government has taken equity stakes in publicly traded companies, including Intel and MP Materials. – NDZ/STAR MAX/IPx/AP

The Trump administration is investing in publicly traded companies — and it’s sending stocks soaring higher.

Under President Donald Trump, the US government has taken equity stakes in companies including Intel (INTC), MP Materials (MP), Lithium Americas (LAC) and Trilogy Metals (TMQ). Investing in public companies is an unusual move that has sparked debate on Wall Street and Capitol Hill about whether the government should be interfering in markets.

Proponents say the equity stakes are a strategic move to support companies in industries that are critical to national security, such as rare earths mining and the production of semiconductor chips. Critics, meanwhile, say it’s a heavy-handed use of government influence that is un-American and exposes taxpayers to unnecessary risk.

So far, the government’s portfolio is outperforming the S&P 500. Intel shares are up 77% this year. MP Materials shares have soared 276%. Lithium Americas and Trilogy Metals shares are up 50% and 204%, respectively. The benchmark S&P 500 is up 14.5% this year.

“Markets seem to be understanding these deals as the federal government signaling it will continue to support these companies,” said Joel Dodge, director of industrial policy and economic security at the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator.

MP Materials is a rare-earths mining company. The company on July 10 announced the Department of Defense (now the Department of War) would purchase $400 million of the company’s stock, giving it a 15% equity stake and making it the company’s largest shareholder.

Intel, the beleaguered chipmaker, announced on August 22 that the US government would invest $8.9 billion in the company, resulting in a 9.9% equity stake. On October 1, the Energy Department announced it would take a 5% equity stake in Lithium Americas, a lithium production company.

Trilogy Metals, a mining company that is developing an enormous mining project in Alaska, announced on October 6 that the US government would invest in the company. The Department of War took a 10% equity stake in Trilogy Metals.

The Commerce Department announced on November 3 that it would take a $50 million stake in Vulcan Elements, a private rare earths start-up. The government also has a “golden share” in US Steel as part of a national security agreement with Nippon Steel, which acquired the company in June.

The Trump administration’s actions are meant to address trade tensions with China, including bolstering supply chains of critical materials like chips and rare-earth minerals.

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