Written by: Forbes
Compiled by: AididiaoJP, Foresight News
The US federal government recently released Trump's financial disclosure documents, detailing how one of America's top crypto asset holders holds tens of millions of dollars in digital assets without immediately incurring a massive tax bill. The core principle of this strategy applies to every crypto investor, regardless of portfolio size: you generally don't owe tax unless you sell.
Holding Appreciating Assets Indefinitely Defers Capital Gains Tax
The disclosure shows Trump holds a cold wallet Bitcoin position worth over $50 million, with no related income reported. This massive appreciation falls under the IRS definition of "unrealized gains" — a paper increase in value where the asset hasn't actually been sold. Under current U.S. tax law, a taxable event is only triggered when an asset is "disposed of" (e.g., sold, traded, or spent). Simply holding an asset, even as its value surges millions, creates no tax liability. This deferral can continue indefinitely until the asset is sold or otherwise disposed of.
Similarly, his Ethereum (ETH) holdings, valued between $5 and $25 million, are also in a cold wallet; additionally, there are 15.75 billion WLFI governance tokens worth over $50 million. None of these positions are accompanied by income reports. The asset value sits on the balance sheet, but as long as it's not sold, there's no taxable event and thus no tax bill.
Staking Rewards and Interest Income Must Be Reported and Taxed in the Year Received
Not all holdings enjoy deferral. Trump reported $510,808 in income from Coinbase validator rewards, compensation earned by staking on the Ethereum network to help validate transactions. The IRS treats staking rewards as ordinary income, taxed in the year received at the token's fair market value when credited, regardless of whether the tokens are later sold.
Currently, some investors are contesting the treatment of staking rewards: an aggressive approach is to wait until sale to report gains, rather than booking the full value as income upon receipt. The IRS hasn't issued definitive guidance for all scenarios, but its 2023 Revenue Ruling 2023-14 regarding Proof-of-Stake (PoS) mining rewards leans toward recognition upon receipt. Most tax professionals adopt this conservative reporting method. The disclosure doesn't specify which approach was used here.
Furthermore, the disclosure shows Trump holds USDC (a dollar-pegged stablecoin) valued between $5 and $25 million, earning $45,932 in interest. Stablecoin prices typically hover near $1, rarely generating capital gains or losses, but interest income is considered ordinary income, taxed in full in the year received, similar to bank interest.
Royalties, Token Sales, and Licensing Fees Taxed as Ordinary Income
The disclosure file also includes two entries that go beyond passive holding. CIC Digital LLC reported $635 million in royalties from "Celebration Coins" (Trump meme coins) and licensing fees related to NFTs. This income is classified as ordinary income under the tax code, taxed at the same rates as wages, not the preferential long-term capital gains rates available for assets held over a year. Income is recognized and taxed when received.
The crypto project World Liberty Financial, associated with Trump, showed $236.25 million from token sales and $65.625 million from equity sales proceeds. Selling tokens is a taxable event, similar to selling stock. The gain or loss is calculated as the difference between the sale price and the cost basis (the original purchase or investment amount). Depending on the holding period, short-term or long-term capital gains tax rates may apply.
The Simplest Yet Most Overlooked Crypto Tax Optimization Strategy
Ultimately, what this disclosure reveals is not a complex offshore structure or aggressive tax avoidance scheme, but the singular reason why the largest positions in the portfolio incur no current tax: they haven't been sold.
Every crypto investor can use this same deferral mechanism. Whether assets sit in a wallet or on an exchange, as long as the value increases without being sold, it doesn't trigger a taxable event.





