US President Donald Trump’s family trust conducted hundreds of millions of dollars in financial transactions during the first quarter of 2026, including acquisitions of stocks tied to the digital asset industry, even as his administration advanced sweeping, pro-cryptocurrency regulatory changes.
According to a mandatory 278-T financial disclosure form released on May 14 by the US Office of Government Ethics, the president’s portfolio included more than 3,600 transactions between January and March. The filings indicate the cumulative value of these transactions ranges from $220 million to $750 million, spanning municipal bonds, index funds, and individual corporate equities.
While most transactions involved traditional blue-chip stocks and broad-market index funds, the targeted purchases of crypto-adjacent firms have drawn scrutiny from government ethics watchdogs.
Which crypto stocks did the Trump family trust acquire?
According to the filing, much of the capital moved through familiar blue-chip names, including:
- Nvidia
- Apple
- Microsoft
- Boeing
- Costco
The documents also show activity in banks, defense contractors, technology suppliers, and municipal bonds. However, the crypto-linked entries, though smaller in scale than the largest technology trades, carry significant political weight.
The family trust purchased shares of Coinbase, the largest US crypto exchange, across nine transactions during the quarter. The largest Coinbase-related purchase was valued between $100,001 and $250,000.
The trust also reported purchases tied to:
- MARA Holdings (one of the largest publicly traded Bitcoin miners)
- CleanSpark
- Robinhood
- SoFi Technologies
- Block (founded by Jack Dorsey)
These companies span mining, exchange infrastructure, retail brokerage, and payments within the digital asset and fintech markets.
The filings also show active trading in Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), a company whose stock serves as a public-market proxy for Bitcoin. Strategy has accumulated a large corporate Bitcoin treasury, making its shares highly sensitive to Bitcoin’s price and financing strategy.
The disclosures list eight Strategy Class A share transactions, including:
- A February purchase valued as high as $100,000
- A January sale valued as high as $50,000
The documents do not specify whether Donald Trump directed any of the trades, nor do they identify the accounts used for each transaction or clarify if all entries involved common stock.
Trump’s assets are managed through a family trust, and some transactions appear to have been executed through brokers.
White House crypto policy shifts reshape the regulatory landscape
The disclosures coincide with a broader debate over Trump’s evolution from crypto skeptic to one of the industry’s most influential political supporters.
Before his 2024 campaign, Trump had repeatedly criticized Bitcoin and other digital assets, calling them speculative and risky. During the campaign, however, he embraced the industry, accepted support from crypto donors, and positioned himself as the candidate who would reverse Washington’s enforcement-led approach to digital assets.
Since returning to office, the administration has moved quickly to advance policies favorable to the cryptocurrency sector.