Most of the buzz around the Trump family's investing follows the famous last name.
The quiet work of building the deals fell to a man almost no one has heard of.
The Dealmaker Behind The Name
His name is John Stetson, and his resume reads like three people's. His ventures run from pizza shops to a foot-ulcer treatment to a cocktail lounge.
His newer line of work is finance. He helped put together at least two stock deals for the fund in the past year, Bloomberg reported.
That fund is American Ventures, where the president's two oldest sons put money. That makes Stetson the general contractor on these deals.
He is the guy who never shows up in the listing photos. But he is the one who built the house.
Stetson does not carry a famous name. That is part of why his role stayed quiet for so long.
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Why The Drone Deal Mattered
The biggest deal on his list was a $1.5 billion merger. It paired an Israeli drone maker with a Florida builder.
Eric Trump talked it up in public, and the fund was one of the backers. The new firm plans to trade on the Nasdaq under the ticker XTND.
The deal should close in the middle of 2026. One drone name in the same group, Unusual Machines (UMAC), has soared this year.
Donald Trump Jr. sits on the advisory board of that drone company. Several of these deals used a reverse merger.
A reverse merger is a side door to go public. A private firm joins one that already trades, and skips the usual IPO.
One drone startup even merged with a golf-course company to get listed. The sectors all match White House goals: drones, AI, and crypto.
What This Says About The Network
The fund has pulled in more than $1 billion. The cash came from rich backers and family offices, spread across 21 funds.
It built all of that in about 10 months. The Financial Times first reported how big it had grown.
The money flows into small stocks and private firms. The targets sit in AI, crypto, drones, nuclear power, and data centers.
One fund was even tied to a tungsten mine in Kazakhstan. That overlap with policy is why the deals draw a closer look.
A spokesman for Donald Trump Jr. says he only puts in money. He does not deal with the government for the firms he backs.
Worth Noting
A famous name draws all the eyes in these small, fast deals. But a quiet figure usually built them.
Knowing who that is can tell you more than the headline does. In these deals, the setup matters more than the names on it.
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