BTC/USD $68,420 +2.8%
ETH/USD $3,540 +1.4%
SOL/USD $142.80 -0.6%
BNB/USD $605.20 +0.9%
XRP/USD $0.62 -1.2%
DOGE/USD $0.18 +5.4%
BTC/USD $68,420 +2.8%
ETH/USD $3,540 +1.4%
SOL/USD $142.80 -0.6%
BNB/USD $605.20 +0.9%
XRP/USD $0.62 -1.2%
DOGE/USD $0.18 +5.4%
Policy

Inside Trump’s Crypto Empire and the Rules That Don’t Apply

Trump’s 2025 financial disclosure lists more than $1.4 billion in crypto-related income, his largest single revenue category. World Liberty Financial and the TRUMP meme coin account for nearl

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 1, 2026
5 min read
NEWS
Inside Trump’s Crypto Empire and the Rules That Don’t Apply
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.
  • Trump’s 2025 financial disclosure lists more than $1.4 billion in crypto-related income, his largest single revenue category.
  • World Liberty Financial and the TRUMP meme coin account for nearly $1.4 billion combined.
  • Federal policy on stablecoins, bitcoin reserves and crypto enforcement moved in the same direction as the value of Trump’s holdings.
  • Ethics officials say presidents are largely exempt from the conflict-of-interest rules that bind other federal employees.

Donald Trump’s mandatory annual financial disclosure runs 927 pages. Buried in it is one number that reframes his presidency: more than $1.4 billion in cryptocurrency-related income in 2025, filed with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics on June 30. Digital assets are now his largest source of personal earnings, ahead of the hotels and golf resorts that built his brand. That timing is not incidental. His administration spent the same year rewriting the rules those ventures operate under.

Where the money came from

Two family-linked ventures drove the bulk of the windfall. World Liberty Financial funneled nearly $800 million to Trump-owned entities through token sales and equity liquidations. The TRUMP meme coin added another $635 million in licensing royalties. The breakdown, against the properties that used to define his fortune:

Source2025 IncomeNatureWorld Liberty Financial – token sales$520M+Direct crypto token salesWorld Liberty Financial – equity sale$250M+Sale of business interests$TRUMP meme coin$635MRoyalty/licensing incomeTrump Doral & Mar-a-Lago (combined)$199.5MReal estate/resort

Nine-fold. That’s how much World Liberty’s token-sale income grew from the $57.35 million it reported the year before. Reuters puts the Trump family’s total crypto profits since he returned to office at $2.3 billion, a figure the disclosure doesn’t fully capture on its own.

Policy moved in the same direction as the portfolio

No single transaction explains this. A sequence of policy decisions does. Early in his second term, Trump signed an executive order creating a strategic bitcoin reserve for the federal government. That single move reinforced institutional demand across the entire crypto sector, his own tokens included. Then came the GENIUS Act, the federal framework now governing stablecoins. White House spokesperson Anna Kelly has cited it directly as one of the policies driving U.S. crypto growth. World Liberty Financial’s stablecoin-linked holdings sit inside that exact regulatory perimeter.

Enforcement moved the same direction. The Justice Department and the SEC pulled back crypto-focused actions the prior administration had pursued. Bank regulators loosened restrictions on how commercial banks handle digital assets. No single decision produced $1.4 billion. But stack them together and they cleared friction from precisely the products that fed Trump’s disclosure: token sales, stablecoin-adjacent holdings, meme coin royalties.

The ethics rules were never built to cover this

One exemption makes all of this legal. Sitting presidents and vice presidents aren’t covered by the conflict-of-interest statutes that bind everyone else in the executive branch. Don Fox knows that rule better than most people alive. As a former acting head of the Office of Government Ethics, he told Reutersthat past presidents managed their finances as though the rule applied to them anyway, out of custom, not obligation. Under Trump, he said, those norms are “totally out the window.” His conclusion: the disclosure makes the case for new legislation restricting what presidents and vice presidents can invest in.

The White House rejects that framing outright. Neither the president nor his family has engaged, or will engage, in conflicts of interest, spokesperson Anna Kelly told outlets covering the filing. His assets, she said, sit in a trust run by his sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump. Ty Cobb sees it differently. The attorney served as White House special counsel during Trump’s first term, and he told CNN he doesn’t believe the crypto self-promotion is legal at all. Licensing the Trump name through commemorative coins, he argued, raises Emoluments Clause questions the founders never saw coming.

Both sides can be right at once. That’s the actual gap critics want closed. The trust is revocable. Trump can alter its terms or shut it down whenever he wants, a structure nothing like the irrevocable blind trusts some of his predecessors used.

What changes from here

The immediate effect is political rather than financial. Congress faces renewed pressure to legislate limits on presidential crypto holdings specifically, since existing ethics statutes were not written with token sales or meme coin royalties in mind. Reuters noted the filing was reviewed and found compliant with applicable rules, which settles the legal question without resolving the political one.

The more durable consequence is exposure. With crypto now the dominant line item in the president’s personal finances, swings in token prices translate more directly into swings in his reported wealth than at any point in his business career, tying a meaningful share of that wealth to an asset class regulators inside his own administration are actively shaping.

The post Inside Trump’s Crypto Empire and the Rules That Do Not Apply appeared first on ETHNews.