The unprecedented profiteering revealed by Donald Trump’s financial disclosure
68 so far! Help us get to 100 signers!
Donald Trump has monetized the presidency on a scale never before seen in American history. In 2025 alone, his outside income topped $2.2 billion (a massive jump from the $622 million his enterprises generated in 2024 before he returned to office). Because he refused to divest his assets or place them in a blind trust, critics argue he has effectively transformed the Oval Office into an engine for personal wealth.
The most glaring conflict of interest involves cryptocurrency. Trump took in roughly $1.2 billion from digital assets, primarily through World Liberty Financial (a joint venture managed by his family) and the sale of Trump-branded "meme" coins. The ethical concern is direct: Trump is personally cashing in on a volatile market while actively rewriting U.S. policy to deregulate it and declaring the U.S. the "crypto capital of the world."
Trump's overseas property and licensing deals underwent a massive expansion during his first year back in office. He collected tens of millions from new hotel, resort, and condo projects in countries like Saudi Arabia ($9 million), the United Arab Emirates ($10.4 million), Qatar ($5 million), and Romania. This raises significant red flags, as the administration is simultaneously negotiating tariffs, military aid, and sensitive diplomatic agreements with these exact foreign powers.
In a stark departure from the norms of his predecessors, Trump maintained a deeply active stock portfolio. Disclosures indicate he engaged in more than 22,000 stock transactions totaling up to $1.4 billion. He bought heavily into major tech companies like Nvidia, Apple, and Microsof, companies whose stock prices are highly sensitive to the administration's trade wars, tax policies, and regulatory decisions.
Beyond large-scale real estate and tech, the filings reveal a relentless push into consumer goods. Trump leveraged his high office to sell an array of branded merchandise, including Bibles, guitars, sneakers, and cologne. A line of Trump-branded watches alone generated $4.7 million.
This corruption underscores a fundamental breakdown in government ethics. By relying on an arrangement where his sons manage his businesses, a setup ethics experts note does nothing to actually resolve conflicts of interest, Trump remains directly tied to entities that profit from the U.S. government and foreign powers. The disclosures paint a picture of an administration where public service and private enrichment have become entirely intertwined.