Last week, after faux canceling the meeting, Donald Trump had the time of his life in Singapore bonding with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un. In the style pioneered by French president Emmanuel Macron, Trump and Kim shook hands, broke bread, and generally looked like, at any moment, they would envelop each other in a great, big bear hug. During a press conference after the summit—part of which was devoted to threatening Justin Trudeau and Canada—Trump told reporters that the joint statement signed by him and his Gulag-loving pal was “very comprehensive,” that the language in which it spelled out the denuclearization process could not have been more clear, and that the only reason there were no details on how the whole thing would actually play out was that “there was no time.” Upon returning to the U.S., the ex–real-estate developer told Americans they could “sleep well,” their president having forestalled the entire threat of nuclear annihilation in less then a day. Unfortunately for the dealmaker-in-chief, however, his favorite audience—the one whose approval he chases with every edict—saw the summit in a slightly different light.

The New York Times’s DealBook reports that business leaders who attended the Yale C.E.O. Summit at the New York Public Library last week were asked in a survey what they thought of the meeting, and the results were pretty “SAD!” Approximately 69 percent of attendees surveyed said the summit as a whole was “overrated” thanks to “a lack of clear targets and outcomes.” Meanwhile, 59 percent said that Kim was the meeting‘s big winner. A full 28 percent thought Trump was the “biggest loser” of the summit, while 27 percent thought the G7—i.e. the people Trump went out of his way to enrage just before heading to Singapore—came out on the bottom of the dog pile.

Of course, Wall Street wasn’t necessarily expecting a big W for America—markets were flat in the lead-up to the summit, nor was it particularly impressed after the fact. “It may be an interesting historic moment, but it’s only a modest step in removing that tail risk—markets are taking it somewhat skeptically and want to see much more concrete follow-up,” Larry Hatheway, chief economist and head of investment solutions at GAM Holding, told The Wall Street Journal. Of course, business leaders aren’t the only ones who think the U.S. got jack-squat (at best!) out of the meeting . . . a view the president is totally taking in stride, and is not at all obsessing over.

Psych!