Marketdash

Kevin O'Leary Says Trump Account Checks Are 'Helicopter Money' That Could Reignite Inflation

MarketDash Editorial Team
9 hours ago
Shark Tank's Kevin O'Leary is sounding the alarm on proposed $2,000 tariff dividend payments, warning they could push inflation back toward 9% and undo years of economic progress.

Shark Tank's Kevin O'Leary isn't mincing words about the proposed $2,000 "tariff dividend" checks tied to the new Trump Accounts initiative. In his view, this is textbook "helicopter money" that could drag the country right back into the inflationary mess it's been fighting to escape.

The Inflation Warning

In a video posted to X, O'Leary drew a direct line between these proposed payments and the stimulus checks distributed during the pandemic. "We tried that during COVID and it drove inflation straight up to 9%," he said, arguing that American families are still dealing with the fallout through elevated prices on groceries, protein, and everyday essentials.

His concern isn't theoretical. The U.S. economy cannot afford another wave of unearned cash flooding the system, especially when the Federal Reserve is still working to bring inflation down to its 2% target. O'Leary insists the focus should be on cooling prices, not introducing new liquidity that could erase recent progress.

Tariffs That Make No Sense

O'Leary also took aim at the funding mechanism behind these dividend checks, specifically the tariffs being levied on products the United States doesn't even produce. "We're slapping tariffs on things like bananas and pineapples… That makes zero sense," he said. "If we don't produce it, why are we taxing it and making life more expensive for families?"

He predicts affordability and healthcare will become weaponized political issues heading into the midterm elections in January, with these kinds of policies front and center in voter minds.

A Polarizing Initiative

O'Leary's critique adds fuel to an already contentious debate surrounding the Invest America Act and its Trump Accounts program. While tech billionaire Michael Dell pledged over $6.25 billion to seed these accounts, others have been less enthusiastic.

Tesla Inc. (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk took a characteristically unconventional stance, dismissing the entire debate by claiming AI and robotics will eventually "eliminate scarcity," rendering money obsolete. Short-seller Jim Chanos promptly mocked this logic, pointing out that if money has no value, neither does the stock market that fuels Musk's wealth.

Meanwhile, tax professionals are raising practical red flags. Due to a legislative oversight involving "future interest" gifts, parents who contribute their own money to these accounts may trigger complex IRS Form 709 filings, creating what some are calling a potential "compliance nightmare" for ordinary families.

Markets Stay Resilient

Despite all the noise around policy proposals and economic uncertainty, the stock market has held up remarkably well in 2025. All three major U.S. indices posted strong gains year-to-date.

The S&P 500 climbed 17.21%, while the Nasdaq Composite and Dow Jones advanced 21.51% and 14.08%, respectively. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 indices, both closed higher on Monday. SPY rose 0.62% to $684.83, while QQQ gained 0.47% to $619.16.

Futures for the major indices were mixed on Tuesday as investors continued weighing economic policy debates against corporate earnings and Fed policy expectations.

Kevin O'Leary Says Trump Account Checks Are 'Helicopter Money' That Could Reignite Inflation

MarketDash Editorial Team
9 hours ago
Shark Tank's Kevin O'Leary is sounding the alarm on proposed $2,000 tariff dividend payments, warning they could push inflation back toward 9% and undo years of economic progress.

Shark Tank's Kevin O'Leary isn't mincing words about the proposed $2,000 "tariff dividend" checks tied to the new Trump Accounts initiative. In his view, this is textbook "helicopter money" that could drag the country right back into the inflationary mess it's been fighting to escape.

The Inflation Warning

In a video posted to X, O'Leary drew a direct line between these proposed payments and the stimulus checks distributed during the pandemic. "We tried that during COVID and it drove inflation straight up to 9%," he said, arguing that American families are still dealing with the fallout through elevated prices on groceries, protein, and everyday essentials.

His concern isn't theoretical. The U.S. economy cannot afford another wave of unearned cash flooding the system, especially when the Federal Reserve is still working to bring inflation down to its 2% target. O'Leary insists the focus should be on cooling prices, not introducing new liquidity that could erase recent progress.

Tariffs That Make No Sense

O'Leary also took aim at the funding mechanism behind these dividend checks, specifically the tariffs being levied on products the United States doesn't even produce. "We're slapping tariffs on things like bananas and pineapples… That makes zero sense," he said. "If we don't produce it, why are we taxing it and making life more expensive for families?"

He predicts affordability and healthcare will become weaponized political issues heading into the midterm elections in January, with these kinds of policies front and center in voter minds.

A Polarizing Initiative

O'Leary's critique adds fuel to an already contentious debate surrounding the Invest America Act and its Trump Accounts program. While tech billionaire Michael Dell pledged over $6.25 billion to seed these accounts, others have been less enthusiastic.

Tesla Inc. (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk took a characteristically unconventional stance, dismissing the entire debate by claiming AI and robotics will eventually "eliminate scarcity," rendering money obsolete. Short-seller Jim Chanos promptly mocked this logic, pointing out that if money has no value, neither does the stock market that fuels Musk's wealth.

Meanwhile, tax professionals are raising practical red flags. Due to a legislative oversight involving "future interest" gifts, parents who contribute their own money to these accounts may trigger complex IRS Form 709 filings, creating what some are calling a potential "compliance nightmare" for ordinary families.

Markets Stay Resilient

Despite all the noise around policy proposals and economic uncertainty, the stock market has held up remarkably well in 2025. All three major U.S. indices posted strong gains year-to-date.

The S&P 500 climbed 17.21%, while the Nasdaq Composite and Dow Jones advanced 21.51% and 14.08%, respectively. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 indices, both closed higher on Monday. SPY rose 0.62% to $684.83, while QQQ gained 0.47% to $619.16.

Futures for the major indices were mixed on Tuesday as investors continued weighing economic policy debates against corporate earnings and Fed policy expectations.