TRUMP (CRYPTO:TRUMPUSD) traded at 1.785, up 3.92% on the day, as fresh disclosures showed President Donald Trump collected more than 1.4 billion dollars in cryptocurrency income during his first full year back in office.
The move follows Tuesday's release of Trump's 2025 annual financial disclosure, a 927 page filing with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics that lays bare just how central digital assets have become to his personal finances. Crypto income now outpaces what he earns from real estate and licensing combined.
| Price | 1.785 |
|---|---|
| Day change | +0.0673 (+3.92%) |
| Volume | 594,878 |
What The Filing Shows
The single biggest crypto line item came from a licensing deal with an entity called Celebration Coins, which generated 635 million dollars tied to the president's TRUMPUSD memecoin, launched just days before his January 2025 inauguration. No online presence for Celebration Coins turned up in searches, and the Trump Organization had not responded to requests for comment as of Tuesday night.
World Liberty Financial, the venture Trump co founded with his sons, provided the other major crypto windfall. Token sales brought in upward of 500 million dollars, while equity stakes added more than 200 million dollars on top of that. A year earlier, token sales at World Liberty had totaled just 57 million dollars, a sharp jump that underscores how quickly the project has scaled.
Why The Coin Is Moving
TRUMPUSD's 3.92% daily gain arrives against this backdrop of disclosure driven headlines, which tend to draw fresh trading interest to tokens tied to the president's name and businesses. Memecoins built around public figures are notoriously volatile, and price swings of several percentage points in a single day are common rather than exceptional for this asset.

The Conflict Of Interest Question
World Liberty's structure has drawn particular scrutiny because Trump receives 75% of the project's net revenue, a arrangement critics say creates a direct conflict given his authority over cryptocurrency policy while in office. Don Fox, a former acting head of the Office of Government Ethics, said presidents dating back to the Watergate era had voluntarily followed conflict of interest norms.