New disclosures show Trump’s crypto ties and trading raise fresh conflict questions Financial disclosures released Tuesday paint a striking picture of how deeply cryptocurrency and other investments figured into Donald Trump’s finances last year — and raise fresh concerns about whether his presidency and personal wealth have become intertwined. Key numbers - Trump reported earning more than $1 billion last year from cryptocurrency-related ventures, according to the filings. - Overall, his disclosures list at least $2.2 billion in income for the year, compared with roughly $622 million his businesses reported in 2024 before he returned to the presidency. The filings imply he may have earned more than $1 billion while in office. Crypto connections - The reports detail activity in Trump-linked crypto vehicles. CIC Digital, a Trump Organization affiliate, is behind the memecoin $Trump. - World Liberty Financial — a crypto firm co-founded during the 2024 campaign by Trump, his sons, and the family of special envoy Steve Witkoff — is now backing several tokens. The White House says Trump has divested from World Liberty. Why this matters for crypto policy - Beyond ownership, the disclosures coincide with policy moves: since taking office Trump has installed regulators seen as friendly to digital assets and has pushed for legislation that would exempt certain crypto from being treated as securities. Reclassifying tokens could significantly reduce disclosure requirements and oversight for projects tied to people in his orbit. For crypto stakeholders, that overlap between policymaking and personal holdings raises obvious questions about regulatory capture and conflicts of interest. Trading activity and timing - The disclosures show more than 20,000 trades across Trump’s investment accounts last year. Many of those trades appear closely timed with public announcements that moved markets. One highlighted instance: a day before announcing a 90-day pause on sweeping tariffs, his accounts made 327 individual stock purchases — each as large as $250,000 — one of the largest single-day buying sprees in the disclosure. The following day the S&P reportedly jumped nearly 10% — described in the filing as one of the biggest single-day gains in the index’s history. Critics say patterns like this make it hard to separate public duty from private gain. Foreign deals and gifts - The filings also show substantial foreign revenue: entities from the Middle East paid about $300 million to Trump businesses last year, the largest foreign-region sum identifiable in the disclosures. - This week Trump flew to North Dakota on the maiden flight of a $400 million Air Force One reportedly gifted by the Qatari royal family — a plane that, according to the reporting, will transfer to Trump’s presidential library foundation when he leaves office, raising further questions about potential private benefit from foreign actors. Responses and takeaways - The White House spokesperson quoted in the original column said neither Trump nor his family “has ever engaged — or will ever engage — in conflicts of interest.” - The column’s author, former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, frames the disclosures as large-scale corruption and argues the pattern makes it impossible for the public to judge whether Trump is acting in the national interest or advancing his own finances. Reich also cites past Trump comments asserting a president can’t have a conflict of interest and saying Americans “don’t care at all” about his tax returns. What this means for crypto watchers - For the crypto industry and its investors, the filings underline two central risks: first, regulatory changes that appear to benefit crypto projects tied to the president could materially alter token classification and disclosure rules; second, opaque ownership structures and rapid trading around policy events fuel concerns about fairness and market integrity. Whether these dynamics will spur greater transparency, legislative scrutiny, or investor caution remains an open question. Attribution This analysis summarizes a column by Robert Reich, professor emeritus of public policy at UC Berkeley and a Guardian US columnist. His new memoir, Coming Up Short: A Memoir of My America, is out now. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news