
Wider technology allocations in the same file show a parallel bet on artificial intelligence and infrastructure alongside crypto-related assets.
Donald Trump’s May 14 federal financial filing shows that his portfolio bought shares in MARA Holdings, Coinbase, and Strategy between January and March 2026.
Of the more than 3,600 transactions listed on 113 pages, these three transactions were the only names associated with cryptocurrencies in the entire file.
What the deposit actually shows
The document in question is OGE Form 278-T, which is the type of periodic transaction report that senior government officials are required to file, with the purchase of MARA Appearance On line 1106, dated March 30, 2026, in a range of $15,001 to $50,000.
Typically, the form does not reveal the exact dollar amounts of individual transactions, only in parentheses. Furthermore, the filing noted that the properties are managed by an outside financial institution, not by Trump directly, which is important when reading anything into the selections.
Regardless of this caveat, the composition of cryptocurrency segments is worth paying attention to. MARA Holdings is the largest publicly traded Bitcoin mining company in the United States by market capitalization. Coinbase is the dominant cryptocurrency exchange in the United States and one of the few cryptocurrency companies with a long trading history as a public company. The strategy holds more Bitcoin on its balance sheet than any other publicly traded company.
These are not obscure picks, but rather three of the most popular institutional proxies for Bitcoin exposure available on US exchanges.
The Trump family also bought shares in Nvidia, whose CEO Jensen Huang was part of the entourage that accompanied the president on his first trip. Visit To China since 2017. Records also show they have invested money in Microsoft, Oracle and Boeing, spending between $1 million and $5 million on those stocks.
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Cryptocurrency projects linked to Trump are under scrutiny
The US President’s financial ties to the cryptocurrency industry have been under scrutiny for some time, with one of them, American Bitcoin, a mining company backed by members of his family, Preparing reports A net loss of $82 million in the first quarter of 2026 despite mining a record 817 bitcoins during that period.
CEO Mike Ho framed it as an accounting problem rather than an operational problem.
Meanwhile, World Liberty Financial has faced a more difficult rally. Its original WLFI symbol He hits Its all-time low hit late last month after a 16% drop in one day, with the asset trading around $0.05 at the time, well below its peak near $0.33.
The project has faced additional pressure from a lawsuit filed by Justin Sun, founder of Tron, and a report by The Wall Street Journal link One of its partners is for individuals subject to US Treasury sanctions in connection with alleged fraud in Southeast Asia.
Moreover, yesterday, Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts asked the Securities and Exchange Commission to investigate the global freedom case, accused It misled investors and/or violated securities laws when it recently borrowed $75 million using WLFI as collateral.





