S&P 500 5,235.18 +1.02%EUR/USD 1.0840 +0.21%GBP/USD 1.2710 +0.14%USD/JPY 149.50 −0.18%BRENT $82.40 −0.81%BTC $67,800 −0.21%GOLD $2,341 +0.55%NASDAQ 16,420.55 +0.74%S&P 500 5,235.18 +1.02%EUR/USD 1.0840 +0.21%GBP/USD 1.2710 +0.14%USD/JPY 149.50 −0.18%BRENT $82.40 −0.81%BTC $67,800 −0.21%GOLD $2,341 +0.55%NASDAQ 16,420.55 +0.74%
A daily business newspaper · Founded in 2026

Money Talk

Finance and markets: business, quotes, gold, energy and releases.

Muskism and the shift in corporate power

Elon Musk has reached the trillion-dollar milestone by systematically discarding conventional business logic, rewriting financial norms, and pivoting toward hard-right political activism. This radical departure from traditional executive behavior raises a pressing question: is the SpaceX founder a singular anomaly or the blueprint for a new era of capitalism?

Muskism and the shift in corporate power
Photo: Business Person

In the latest episode of The Big View, Peter Thal Larsen probes this transformation with Quinn Slobodian, co-author of the book Muskism. Their conversation examines whether the billionaire's influence represents a permanent structural change in how corporations interact with the state and society. By operating outside the standard constraints of public markets and traditional corporate governance, Musk has created a model that prioritizes individual ideological control over collective investor consensus.

Slobodian argues that this movement is not merely a product of one man's personality but a calculated rejection of the late-20th-century capitalist consensus. As SpaceX reaches valuations that dwarf historical industrial giants, the discussion highlights the risks of tying such immense economic power to the shifting political whims of a single individual. The episode forces a re-evaluation of whether modern markets can—or should—accommodate a form of enterprise that thrives on polarizing public discourse while managing critical global infrastructure.

Share article
TelegramXFacebook

When reusing this material a link to Money Talk is required.

Comments (0)

Leave a comment

No comments yet. Be the first!