As those of you who keep up with the president’s Twitter feed know, Donald Trump not only believes that he alone, by virtue of his Titian presence in the White House, has pushed the markets to record highs, but that he doesn’t receive enough credit for doing so. When he’s not tweeting about “FAKE NEWS,” or Jeff Sessions, or plastic surgery procedures, or how he never watches TV—despite seemingly responding, in real time, to TV—he’s informing his followers that they have him to thank for stock market gains. By our count, he’s credited himself at least seven times in the last three weeks alone, tweeting, “Stock Market hit another all-time high yesterday - despite the Russian hoax story” on July 15; “Just got to the #USWomensOpen in Bedminster, New Jersey. People are really happy with record high stock market - up over 17% since election!” later that day; and “Business is looking better than ever with business enthusiasm at record levels. Stock Market at an all-time high. That doesn’t just happen!” on August 3.

There was also this memorable tweet on July 31, the day he axed 10-day-old White House Comms Director Anthony Scaramucci:

Strangely, though, Trump had nothing to say about the stock market on Tuesday, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average broke its winning streak around noon, sliding further amid his comments that “North Korea best not make any more threats to the United States,” unless the Hermit Kingdom wants to be “met with fire and fury like the world has never seen.” Gold E.T.F.s and weapons manufacturers saw a small, but noticeable, bump.

In related news, investment manager Jeffrey Gundlach, who was one of the few people to predict Trump would win the election, predicted Tuesday that the S&P 500 will fall by at least 3 percent by the end of the year and told CNBC that market gains have virtually nothing to do with Trump. “The current president is getting virtually nothing done,” Gundlach said. “He’s very noisy about it. The nothing getting done is the consistent theme. The market’s been going up with nothing getting done. So I don’t think the president’s performance has much to do with where the stock market valuation is today.” Obviously, these comments will not be making the folder full of positive news about himself that Trump has reportedly received twice daily since moving into the West Wing.