America’s famously indecisive president is facing a monumental decision affecting the entire U.S. economy, so it’s no surprise that he’s treating it with all the seriousness of another reality television spectacle. On February 3, Janet Yellen‘s term as chair of the Federal Reserve comes to an end, and Donald Trump will have had to have appointed a successor. He could, of course, renominate Yellen, whose dovish policy has helped fuel an incredible eight-year stock market rally. (After bashing Yellen on the campaign trail for allegedly propping up Barack Obama’s economy, Trump has realized he’s an “easy money” guy after all.) But the conservative moneymen surrounding Trump are agitating for a change.

The short list to succeed Yellen has now dwindled to a handful of names, including Jerome Powell, John Taylor, and Kevin Warsh, with a decision expected before Trump leaves for Asia on November 3. The only trouble, as Axios reports, is that no one, including the president, seems to have a clue whom he’s going to pick. While most of the aides reporter Jonathan Swan spoke to believe Trump will appoint Powell, nobody can say for sure. “It’s never a done deal with this guy,” one source told Swan.

The president’s lack of macroeconomic literacy may also create an opening for allies seeking to influence him. Rupert Murdoch, the Fox News C.E.O. and Australian media mogul who serves as one of Trump’s closest unofficial advisers, has reportedly “urged the president to appoint either of the two free-market conservative finalists, Stanford economist John Taylor or former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh, according to two sources familiar with his outreach.” Plenty of people think Warsh would do a terrible job, and Trump reportedly didn’t have “amazing chemistry” with Taylor—obviously a critical quality for a Fed chair. But the Murdoch worldview is insidious: Swan notes that a Friday op-ed in Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal advocating for Taylor or Warsh was “was read attentively in the West Wing.” (Powell, who remains a favorite of Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, is described by the Journal as a Yellen knockoff.)

Yellen herself shouldn’t be counted out. The current Fed chair has been a key force behind the MAGAnomics gravy train, keeping interest rates low and the economy humming even as she begins slimming down the Fed’s multi-trillion dollar balance sheet. Wall Street has been plenty comfortable with Yellen’s approach, so it’s not clear what advantage Trump would gain by shaking up leadership to please his free-market allies—especially when a booming stock market is the capstone of his high-growth agenda. Still, financial policy isn’t really Trump’s forte: the president has always cared more about personalities and personal connections. At this point, the only thing that’s clear is that Gary Cohn is definitely not getting the job.