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Trump Family Trust Discloses Crypto Stock Buys as Senate Panel Advances Market Bill

Trump Family Trust Discloses Crypto Stock Buys as Senate Panel Advances Market Bill

The Trump Family Trust bought shares in Coinbase, MARA Holdings, and Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) during the first quarter of 2026, according to a financial disclosure filed this week with the US Office of Government Ethics. The filing covers more than 3,600 transactions between January and March with a total value estimated between $220 million and $750 million. The same week, the Senate Banking Committee advanced the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act in a 15–9 vote, giving the bill a path to the full Senate.

What the filing shows

The trust reported nine purchases of Coinbase stock. The biggest single Coinbase trade landed on Feb. 10 and was valued between $100,001 and $250,000. It also logged two smaller buys of MARA Holdings, a large public bitcoin mining firm. Strategy got eight transactions — both buys and sells. The largest Strategy purchase ran between $50,001 and $100,000, while a January sale went up to $50,000.

The portfolio also holds positions in Robinhood, SoFi Technologies, and Block — all crypto-linked or fintech companies. Still, crypto trades are a small slice of the broader trust, which is heavy on Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, and Boeing. The filing does not say whether Trump directed any of the trades. His assets sit in a family trust managed by his sons and external brokers.

Senate committee vote on crypto bill

The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act cleared the Senate Banking Committee on a 15–9 vote, with bipartisan support. The bill aims to set federal rules for digital asset markets. Elizabeth Warren and several other Democrats voted no, citing concerns about consumer protection, illicit finance, and ethics issues tied to Trump's crypto holdings.

The timing isn't great for Warren's camp. The Trump trust disclosure landed just ahead of the committee vote, giving critics fresh ammunition. But the bill's sponsors argue the legislation would bring much-needed oversight to a market that's still operating in a regulatory gray zone.

What happens next

The committee's vote sends the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act to the full Senate floor, where its fate is unclear. No date has been set for debate. Meanwhile, the Trump trust's crypto bets — even if small — keep the spotlight on how the former president's family finances intersect with the industry he's publicly embraced.