Trump’s financial disclosure lists more than $1.4 billion in revenue from cryptocurrency ventures; White House responds
According to Reuters, Donald Trump reported that his family’s cryptocurrency business generated more than $1.4 billion in revenue in 2025. According to a review of the US President’s latest financial disclosures on Tuesday, June 30, it shows that the majority of the US President’s income comes from digital assets that benefit from his policies.
According to his 2025 annual disclosure document filed with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, trump card Received more than $500 million in funding from World Liberty Financial, the cryptocurrency business he co-founded with his son. President reports another $635 million from sale of his assets $Trump Meme Coin.
According to NBC News, the $635 million was earned from an organization called Celebration Coins, but no digital footprint of the organization was found.
latest letter Senate Democrats claim that a Wyoming-registered company called Celebration Cards facilitated the April cryptocurrency conference at Mar-a-Lago. The company is now a major cryptocurrency hub.
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Trump also reported receiving more than $80 million from settlements with various media companies. He also reported that his company earned millions of dollars from licensing his name to overseas real estate developers.
Reuters estimated in a previous report that the Trump family has made at least $2.3 billion in profits from investors since Trump returned to office.
The figures were disclosed to the U.S. Office of Government Ethics in 2017. 927 page document.
White House response
this White House A response to the findings has now been made.
“The President and his family have never been, and will never be, involved in a conflict of interest,” a White House representative said in a statement on Tuesday, NBC News reported. “President Trump is proud to make the United States the cryptocurrency capital of the world through executive action, supporting legislation like the Genius Act and other common-sense policies to advance innovation and economic opportunity for all Americans.”
Unlike previous presidents, Trump did not divest assets or place them in a blind trust before taking office. Third-party financial institutions manage assets and execute transactions through automated technology, according to the Trump Organization.
“What’s striking to me is how much of the pie Trump has inserted,” said Douglas Brinkley, a history professor at Rice University. “There’s no precedent to compare it to. No president in the 20th or 21st century has done anything like this.”