In the first year of his second term, President Donald Trump has overseen not just a transformation of federal policy, but a massive expansion of his family’s private fortune. Ventures launched since his reelection have generated at least $4 billion in proceeds and paper wealth for the first family, according to financial disclosures and securities filings.
This financial boom is being driven by a strategic pivot away from traditional real estate and into the high-risk, high-reward worlds of cryptocurrency, artificial intelligence, and nuclear energy. With the Trump Organization increasingly integrating its operations into the wider U.S. economy, ethics experts are raising alarms about the unprecedented coupling of the President’s economic influence and his family’s bottom line.
The Crypto Pivot: World Liberty Financial
World Liberty Financial is a Cryptocurrency venture founded by The President, his sons and Real Estate Developer Steve Witkoff at the centre of the new Wealth being created. The project has become a large source of Foreign Capital – particularly from the Middle East and Asia.
The venture issues governance tokens and stablecoins backed by U.S. Treasury bonds, generating revenue through trading fees and interest payments. However, the project’s cap table reads like a diplomatic guest list. Investors include entities linked to the founder of Binance—who was recently under federal investigation—and significant capital flows from Gulf nations looking to diversify their economies.
“The White House says there is no conflict of interest and that they’ve installed guardrails,” notes Wall Street Journal reporter David Uberti. “But a lot of these assets lead back up into the Trump Revocable Trust, which is ultimately controlled by Donald Trump Jr. and benefits the President.”
The Nuclear Option: A $6 Billion AI Bet
Perhaps the most ambitious expansion of the Trump portfolio is the recent merger between Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG) and TAE Technologies, a California-based nuclear fusion firm. TAE Technologies is a well-established entity in the emerging fusion energy sector and has received support from traditional American financial institutions like Goldman Sachs, Chevron, and the Schwab family. The combination of TAE Technologies and TMTG signifies a “full circle” moment for TMTG; the company has gone from being a meme stock subject to extreme volatility to becoming a major component of the energy and infrastructure sectors, which are essential to creating the next-generation AI data center operations.
Regulatory Rollbacks and Executive Orders
There have been many questions concerning the timing of these business actions, especially when the announcement of the merger between TMTG-TAE came only days after President Trump signed an Executive Order on December 11, 2025 prohibiting local and state governments from creating their own regulations regarding artificial intelligence and data centers.
The executive order relates directly to the Trump administration’s overall plan for the use of artificial intelligence as a part of the “all-in” strategy of the Trump administration to enable faster deregulation and to ensure that there will be enough energy supply from natural gas and nuclear systems to meet the rapid energy requirements of the AI industry. By preempting state-level oversight, the administration has effectively cleared the runway for companies like the newly merged TMTG-TAE to build data centers with fewer hurdles.
“Those community organizations in different places around the country… are anathema to this idea of building out data centers as quickly as possible,” Uberti explains. “The administration is being very antagonistic toward renewable energy… and instead being all-in on fossil fuels and this more unproven technology of nuclear.”
Proximity to Power
The seamless overlap between the President’s policy agenda and his family’s investment targets raises questions about whether the “Trump bump” is a result of business acumen or political access.
Foreign investors and potential business partners are reportedly attracted to the Trump brand not just for its fame, but for the perception of influence. While the administration insists that the President has divested from active management, the structure of the Trump Revocable Trust allows him to retain a beneficial interest in the empire’s success.
A Moonshot Strategy
The shift toward “very speculative, highly risky corners of financial markets” marks a departure from the family’s brick-and-mortar roots. The Trump family’s investment tactics are reliant on technologies that are either unproven to become commercially viable or have experienced large fluctuations in a poorly regulated industry such as the cryptocurrency markets by 2031. The form of the Trump family’s investments is shifting from investment focus as a business owner to that of an active participant within both government and business, increasingly interweaving interests in government and commercial sectors.
As these interests grow and become more intertwined, the interests of government regulators, investors, and voters are beginning to emerge from this developing interrelationship between the White House and Trump enterprises.




