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President Redirects Cryptocurrency Profits into Equities and Bonds

Published Jul 13, 2026
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Summary:
  • President Trump earned over $1.4 billion from his family's cryptocurrency projects in 2025.
  • His personal stock and bond portfolio grew to as much as $2.6 billion by the end of 2025.
  • Retail investors lost $2.3 billion in Trump-backed crypto projects as of April 2025, per a Reuters report.

President Trump often speaks of digital assets. He wants the U.S. to be the "crypto capital of the world." But his latest personal financial disclosures show that his money managers invested a significant portion of the proceeds from his family's crypto projects into safer harbors.

Timothy Massad, a former CFTC chairman who currently leads the Digital Assets Policy Project at Harvard University's Kennedy School, commented: "Although the President talks about digital assets as the frontier of finance and making the United States the crypto capital of the world, the disclosure form suggests his personal strategy is to make a quick buck from crypto - through the sale of his meme coin and World Liberty tokens - but then invest his profits in traditional assets like stocks and bonds."

The Numbers Behind the Disclosures

According to the disclosure forms, Trump obtained more than $1.4 billion during 2025 from his family's pair of cryptocurrency projects - namely, World Liberty Financial and the Trump-branded meme coin.

At the end of 2025, Trump's stock and bond portfolio was worth between $703 million and $2.6 billion. This marks a jump from between $225 million and $608 million as of December 2024. The Reuters analysis shows the portfolio increased at least fourfold.

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As of the end of 2025, Trump's companies had a minimum of $160 million allocated to bitcoin and ether, the leading two digital currencies, and also held as much as $6 million in various other tokens. A year earlier, he reported having between $1 million and $5 million in ether tokens.

Trump personally owned 15.75 billion World Liberty governance tokens at the end of 2025, valued at over $50 million in the disclosure. The tokens were issued to him as payment for his work with the company. Because he is a co-founder, his vesting period for selling those tokens is longer compared to ordinary investors.

Yet the filings show that most of the crypto profits flowed into stocks and bonds. The filings also indicate that the president did not disclose any purchases of shares in two crypto companies that are publicly traded and supported by his sons, Eric and Donald Jr.

The Strategy Gap

The Trump Organization said the filings "demonstrate that The Trump Organization continues to maintain a strong financial position, supported by world class, valuable assets, substantial liquidity and a conservative balance sheet." The White House said the president's assets are held in "fully discretionary accounts managed by independent third-party financial institutions."

The president's investment choices stand in stark contrast to the public enthusiasm for digital assets expressed by his family and administration. While the White House has pushed for pro-crypto policies, the president's personal portfolio leans heavily on traditional asset classes, suggesting a cautious approach to the volatile crypto market. This pattern of public advocacy paired with private caution carries particular weight when the president himself is involved in promoting crypto ventures that have led to significant retail losses.

Meanwhile, Trump's sons keep promoting crypto. Since November 2024, Eric Trump has consistently called bitcoin "the greatest asset" of the modern era and forecasted it would reach $1 million, which would represent a rise from its current level of about $64,000. He also said his father, the president, "believed in digital assets in a big way."

This divergence between personal caution and public promotion underscores a broader concern: while the Trump family advocates for crypto adoption, the president's own financial moves suggest a wariness that many retail investors may lack. The $2.3 billion in losses suffered by retail investors in Trump-linked projects further highlights the risks inherent in the volatile market.

World Liberty spokesman David Wachsman said, "World Liberty has been built for the long-term and we strongly believe the future of financial services will be architected with digital asset technology."

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