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The president has been accused of corruption relating to his meme coin.
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He has also been accused of conflicts of interest related to other crypto investments.
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Do not take any risks with your money here.
It’s no secret that President Donald Trump is heavily invested in cryptocurrencies ranging from Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) and Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) to his Official Trump (CRYPTO: TRUMP) meme coin on Solana, among many others. It’s also no secret that the president’s focus on cryptocurrency regulation reforms has been a major pillar of his administration’s efforts so far. But when those two things combine, political clashes are bound to happen, and at least so far, they aren’t frivolous or trivial in nature.
On May 6, a hearing on cryptocurrency legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives got contentious, with Democratic Rep. Angie Craig from Minnesota saying: “It’s legitimate to call out the self-dealing from the Trump administration related to hawking meme coins from the White House. It’s corrupt.” Rep. Maxine Waters from California also accused the president and his family of corruption, and Rep. Stephen Lynch from Massachusetts voiced similar concerns.
Are these allegations a concern? How should investors be approaching these issues?
There are many aspects of the president’s cryptocurrency investments that are worth considering in terms of risk to investors; in total his crypto holdings are estimated to be worth about $2.9 billion.
The majority of that value is from the president’s stake in the Official Trump meme coin, which has a market cap of $2.7 billion currently. An estimated 80% of the supply of that coin is held by companies or individuals closely affiliated with the president or his family, which means that increases to its price disproportionately benefit them rather than other holders. Furthermore, those entities gather transaction fees with every trade, which resulted in about $100 million in proceeds during the coin’s first two weeks of trading, according to Reuters. In other words, trading the coin puts money in the president’s pocket, and he has encouraged his followers to buy it using his social media accounts.
The president is also supposedly hosting a dinner for the 220 largest holders of the coin on May 22 at one of his golf courses. Therefore, it is explicitly part of the president’s plan to enable those who buy enough of the coin to also simultaneously buy access to the president.