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Reuters’ investigation describes a repeating pattern: the Trump family’s brand and political influence helped promote crypto ventures, while the family’s own financial risk stayed limited. According to Reuters’ estimates, the family received at least $2.3 billion, while investors in the same core projects lost roughly $2.3 billion — including paper losses.
An independent summary of reporting by Reuters. All figures below are Reuters’ estimates. Not affiliated with Reuters.
On June 9, 2026, Reuters published a special investigation into four major crypto projects linked to Donald Trump’s family. Reuters argues the overall pattern was similar across all of them: the family risked little of its own money, publicly promoted the ventures, and drew income through token sales, licensing arrangements, and stakes in related companies. Investors, meanwhile, faced falling token and share prices.
Reuters describes the same four-step loop repeating across the ventures.
Source: Reuters investigation, June 9, 2026.
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Bars are scaled to the largest single figure (~$1.6B) for comparison. All values are Reuters estimates; “earned” for ALT5 / AI Financial reflects the family’s take via World Liberty’s revenue-sharing, and for American Bitcoin the reported value of Eric Trump’s stake.
Reuters says its analysis was based on blockchain records, corporate filings, public statements, company disclosures, and interviews with investors and experts. A separate Reuters methodology article explains how the agency calculated the family’s profits and investors’ losses.
Read the Reuters methodology ↗{{ r.t }}
This is not only a crypto story. It sits at the intersection of politics, financial regulation, a president’s personal brand, and speculative digital assets.
Even if the structure does not directly break the law, Reuters highlights a conflict-of-interest question: state power is helping shape the rules for an industry, while the president’s family benefits from that same industry.
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Every figure and claim on this page is drawn from Reuters’ reporting. Links open in a new tab.