In June 2026, Reuters published two consecutive in-depth investigative reports on the Trump family's crypto business empire, drawing widespread attention from global financial markets and media. The investigation revealed that since Trump's return to the White House, his family has accumulated approximately $2.3 billion in earnings through four core crypto ventures—World Liberty Financial (WLFI), the $TRUMP memecoin, American Bitcoin, and ALT5 Sigma (later renamed AI Financial). Concurrently, overall unrealized losses for the many investors who participated in these projects were also close to $2.3 billion. While the "family profit of $2.3 billion and investor loss of $2.3 billion" does not imply a strict one-to-one correlation, this figure still clearly reflects a reality: over the past two years of crypto fervor, the Trump family reaped enormous profits through brand licensing, equity arrangements, token distributions, and capital operations, while many ordinary investors bore most of the risk as market enthusiasm waned.
What is more noteworthy is that although these four businesses operate in different sectors, covering decentralized finance (DeFi), stablecoins, memecoins, Bitcoin mining, and digital payments, their underlying logic is highly consistent. They did not achieve success through revolutionary technological innovation nor did they build market value based on steadily growing business revenues. Instead, to a large extent, they leveraged the immense influence and topicality of Trump—a globally known political figure—to transform a political brand into a financial asset, which was then packaged as an investment opportunity and sold to the market.
From 'Bitcoin is a Scam' to Building a Crypto Empire
Looking back at Trump's past public stance on digital currencies, this transformation is quite dramatic. From 2019 to 2021, Trump expressed skepticism about Bitcoin and other digital assets on multiple occasions. He not only publicly stated he was not a Bitcoin supporter but also suggested digital currencies could threaten the U.S. dollar's status as the global reserve currency, even once calling Bitcoin "something that looks like a scam."
However, as the U.S. crypto industry grew into a significant political donor force and digital asset markets attracted increasing attention from young voters and investors, Trump's position began to shift noticeably. During the 2024 presidential campaign, he frequently sent friendly signals to the crypto industry, promising to make the U.S. a global cryptocurrency hub, opposing overregulation, and supporting digital asset innovation. As his campaign succeeded and crypto industry expectations for his policies intensified, the market gradually cast Trump as the so-called "Crypto President."
It was precisely against this backdrop of mutual reinforcement between politics and market sentiment that a crypto business network built around the Trump family rapidly took shape. Unlike traditional entrepreneurs who need to invest in R&D, build infrastructure, or operate businesses long-term, the Trump family's most important asset was essentially just one thing—the Trump name itself. The political influence, media attention, and social discourse heat represented by this name became the foundational core for all subsequent commercial operations.
World Liberty Financial: The Most Important Money Printer in Trump's Crypto Empire
Among all the Trump family's crypto projects, World Liberty Financial is undoubtedly the most core and most profitable venture. From its public positioning, the project aims to be a decentralized finance platform aspiring to build a comprehensive ecosystem integrating lending, stablecoin issuance, on-chain asset management, and digital financial services. However, what truly underpins its market value is not technological innovation but the political brand endorsement provided by the Trump family.
World Liberty Financial initially raised funds by issuing WLFI governance tokens. Unlike ordinary cryptocurrencies, these tokens are not freely tradable; investors' purchases remain locked for extended periods, with their primary function being participation in project governance votes. From a business logic perspective, this means investors bear asset price volatility risk without obtaining the liquidity typical in normal markets.
More importantly, according to publicly disclosed information, Trump-linked entities hold significant economic interests in the project and receive a high percentage of token sale revenue. In other words, when investors buy WLFI tokens, a substantial portion of the funds flows directly into the project's system, with a considerable part of the profits ultimately ending up with the Trump family. Reuters estimates this single venture alone has generated about $1.6 billion in profit for the Trump family, accounting for the majority of the total earnings from the entire crypto portfolio.
Beyond governance tokens, World Liberty Financial also launched the USD1 stablecoin. Similar to mainstream stablecoins like USDT and USDC, USD1's business model essentially involves using user-deposited U.S. dollars to purchase U.S. Treasury bonds and other low-risk financial assets, generating revenue from the interest these assets yield. As the stablecoin's scale expands, the project's controlled capital pool grows accordingly, and the resulting interest income becomes a steady, ongoing cash flow source. For the project operator, this model means that even if market trading enthusiasm declines, revenue streams remain relatively stable as long as the stablecoin scale is maintained.
However, for investors, the situation is entirely different. As market sentiment gradually cooled, the WLFI token price continued to fall. Coupled with limited liquidity and lock-up mechanisms, many investors were unable to exit in time. According to Reuters statistics, investor losses related to World Liberty Financial have reached the hundreds of millions of dollars, while the Trump family had long locked in massive profits through token sales and project revenue distributions.
$TRUMP Memecoin: The Most Direct Financialization Experiment of the Presidential IP
If World Liberty Financial at least possesses some financial business logic, the $TRUMP memecoin represents the most direct and thorough commercial monetization of the Trump brand.
Memecoins themselves do not generate cash flow nor are they backed by traditional assets. Their value primarily stems from market sentiment and community consensus. Whether it's Dogecoin or Shiba Inu, their price increases rely more on viral discourse and investor emotion rather than actual business performance.
Trump clearly possesses the ability to generate market sentiment. When the $TRUMP memecoin launched, a flood of investors rushed into the market. Many purchased the token not because they understood blockchain technology or were optimistic about its future applications, but because they believed in the Trump brand's value, even viewing the presidential identity as an implicit credit endorsement.
During the market frenzy, the token price rose rapidly, forming a typical memecoin speculative trend. According to the Reuters investigation, Trump-linked entities held a large reserve of pre-allocated tokens and gained over $600 million in profit from token value appreciation and related fee income.
However, the memecoin market has always followed the same pattern: those who enter earliest often profit the most, while those who enter last bear the greatest risk. As market heat began to dissipate, the $TRUMP price retraced approximately 97% from its peak, inflicting severe losses on many retail investors who bought at high prices. Many later admitted they invested not in a thoroughly researched project, but in their trust in the Trump brand and the presidential identity.
American Bitcoin: Injecting the Trump Concept into a Mining Company
Compared to the first two projects, American Bitcoin appears closer to the traditional crypto industry. The company is primarily engaged in Bitcoin mining, with a business model involving building mining facilities, deploying mining rigs, earning Bitcoin rewards, and holding or selling Bitcoin for profit.
From an industry perspective, this was originally a relatively ordinary mining enterprise. However, when the Trump family got involved, the market swiftly bestowed it with a new identity—a "Trump concept stock."
For mining companies, the greatest challenge is often not the mining technology itself but fundraising capability and market valuation. The addition of the Trump brand significantly boosted American Bitcoin's visibility in capital markets, making investors willing to grant it valuations far above the industry average.
Subsequently, the company went public via a merger with a listed entity. Propelled by capital markets, its valuation once surged dramatically, and the value of the Trump family's related equity holdings also rose rapidly. For the Trump family, the biggest advantage of this model was achieving massive paper wealth growth without directly selling assets.
However, as the market refocused on corporate fundamentals, problems gradually emerged. A mining company's profitability ultimately still depends on Bitcoin's price, electricity costs, equipment efficiency, and operational management—not a politician's name. When market sentiment receded, the stock price began reverting to reality, and many investors who bought at high prices bore the corresponding losses.
ALT5 Sigma and AI Financial: Capital Mania Driven by Concept Stacking
Compared to the previous projects, the story of ALT5 Sigma more resembles a game of concepts in capital markets.
The company initially operated in digital payments and crypto asset settlement, primarily serving businesses and merchants by offering crypto payment processing, digital asset transfers, and settlement services. From a business standpoint, it more closely resembled a fintech firm.
However, after establishing connections with the Trump crypto ecosystem, the company gained unprecedented market attention. Subsequently, it rebranded as AI Financial, simultaneously layering Artificial Intelligence, Cryptocurrency, and the Trump concept.
In capital markets, few investment themes concurrently possess the three hot labels of AI, Crypto, and Trump. Consequently, the company's stock price skyrocketed, with the market awarding it valuation levels far exceeding those of traditional payment companies.
But capital markets must eventually return to reality. As investors gradually realized the company's actual revenue growth could not match such high valuations, market enthusiasm cooled, and the stock price saw a significant correction. For early shareholders, this upward movement had already created immense wealth; for investors entering the market later, it meant bearing the losses after the high valuation receded.
The Common Logic Behind the Four Projects: How Political Influence Becomes a Financial Asset
On the surface, these four businesses belong to entirely different industry sectors. But upon deeper analysis, they all follow the same commercial logic.
First, the Trump family leveraged its globally recognized political brand to establish market trust and attention. Second, it amplified market sentiment continuously through media dissemination and social platforms. Subsequently, the projects attracted investors by issuing tokens, raising funds, going public, or boosting valuations. Finally, the family realized profit monetization through equity, tokens, sales revenue shares, or brand licensing fees.
In this process, the Trump family captured front-end profits, while market investors assumed back-end risks.
In a sense, these four projects are not traditional tech startup stories but rather an experiment on how political influence transforms into financial assets. When presidential identity merges with capital markets, the resulting valuation amplification effect far surpasses levels achievable by ordinary enterprises.
Who Are the Real Payers?
From a commercial perspective, the Trump family undoubtedly executed an extraordinarily successful brand monetization. Leveraging their influence, they built a crypto business empire spanning stablecoins, memecoins, mining, and digital payments with minimal upfront capital investment, reaping tens of billions of dollars in profit.
But for investors, this episode once again proves an old and brutal rule of financial markets: when investment decisions are based on emotion, belief, and celebrity effect, risk has often already begun accumulating.
Many investors purchased these assets not after carefully analyzing the projects' cash flows, profitability, or business models, but by buying into a vision of future price appreciation. They believed the presidential identity could create value, that political influence could persistently drive prices upward, and that the brand itself could substitute for fundamentals.
However, history has repeatedly shown that brands can generate attention, and hype can create short-term price action, but what ultimately determines long-term value is how much real income the asset itself can generate.
The $2.3 billion wealth created by the Trump family's crypto empire might just be a success story in numbers; but for the entire market, it more closely resembles a practical lesson on how political influence, capital markets, and investment psychology interact.








