In the midst of what has been a brutal two weeks for Donald Trump, the Republican presidential nominee announced the brain trust that will serve as his campaign’s economic policy advisory board.

Only two of the names on the list, released Friday, are actual economists, one of whom is Stephen Moore. The other 11 are mostly business titans, including real-estate heavy hitters Steven Roth and Howard Lorber, private equity guys Tom Barrack and Steven Feinberg, and bankers Stephen Calk and Andy Beal.

The most eyebrow-raising name on the list is John Paulson, the hedge funder who famously bet the American housing market would flop and subprime mortgages would collapse in value—events more colloquially known as the financial crisis that toppled the U.S. economy in 2007. Paulson’s firm, Paulson & Co., made $15 billion that year, while Paulson himself pocketed about $4 billion, or as The Wall Street Journal put it, $10 million a day. (Hard times struck the firm earlier this year, and Paulson had to put up his own fortune to back a line of credit Paulson & Co. has had with HSBC since 2010.)

The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to requests for comment, but the candidate, who is scheduled to deliver a speech on his economic policy platform Monday in Detroit, told CNBC: “I am pleased that we have such a formidable group of experienced and talented individuals that will work with me to implement real solutions for the economic issues facing our country.”