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Trump Media Launches Truth PSI, Selling Millisecond-Advance Access to Truth Social Posts

Trump Media Launches Truth PSI, Selling Millisecond-Advance Access to Truth Social Posts

Trump Media has launched Truth PSI, a service that sells Wall Street firms millisecond-early access to top Truth Social posts. The offering, first reported by Crypto Briefing, is drawing scrutiny over market fairness — traders could act on President Trump's statements before the general public even sees them.

How Truth PSI works

Truth PSI provides a data feed that delivers select posts — likely those from Trump himself — to paying clients a fraction of a second ahead of the public timeline. That tiny window is enough for high-frequency trading algorithms to parse the content and execute trades before the broader market reacts. The service is aimed at financial institutions that want an edge on market-moving statements.

Market integrity questions

The early-access model raises obvious fairness concerns. If a Trump post about a company or a crypto project triggers a price swing, firms with Truth PSI could profit at the expense of retail investors who see the post later. Critics argue this creates a two-tier information system, similar to the controversy around direct data feeds from exchanges. The timing is especially sensitive given Trump's frequent posts on stocks and digital assets.

Regulatory implications

Regulators may take a close look. The SEC has previously cracked down on firms that gave select clients early access to market-moving data. While Truth PSI is a media product, not a trading service, the line blurs when the data is used for trading decisions. No agency has commented publicly yet, but the launch could invite questions about whether the service violates principles of fair disclosure.

It's not clear which firms, if any, have signed up for Truth PSI. Trump Media hasn't disclosed pricing or client names. The launch comes amid ongoing scrutiny of the company's business practices and its ties to the crypto sector. For now, the service is live — and the debate over information asymmetry in markets just got a new flashpoint.