Trump ramps up bets on ai infrastructure, chips and digital assets, filings show
Trump shifts hundreds of millions toward ai and semiconductors
Former U.S. President Donald Trump executed more than 3,700 financial transactions worth over $220 million in the first quarter of 2025, sharply tilting his holdings toward artificial intelligence infrastructure and semiconductor assets, according to a disclosure filed with the Office of Government Ethics.
The report shows broad selling of major technology and defensive holdings, and new positions across ai hardware, enterprise software and chip design firms. The scale and pace of activity resemble the trading style of active hedge funds rather than a traditional, static, blue-chip portfolio.
Major tech names and defensive etfs cut
The filing lists sizable disposals of Microsoft, Amazon and Meta, each reported in the top disclosure band of $5 million to $25 million.
Trump also reduced positions in dividend-focused etfs, signaling a move away from a defensive, income-oriented approach and toward higher-growth, higher-volatility sectors tied to ai and advanced computing.
Capital reallocated into chips and design software
Proceeds were funneled into a wide range of semiconductor names, including Nvidia, Broadcom, AMD, Intel, Micron, Texas Instruments and Marvell.
Alongside chipmakers, the portfolio added design software providers Synopsys and Cadence, giving exposure to multiple stages of the chip production chain, from physical hardware to the electronic design automation tools needed to create advanced semiconductors.
Ai hardware, enterprise computing and policy-linked bets
The disclosure highlights new and expanded positions in ai-related hardware and enterprise computing firms such as Dell and Intel.
Dell shares were first acquired on February 10 in a reported range of $1 million to $5 million. That stake preceded a public endorsement and a subsequent Dell contract with government entities, suggesting a growing alignment between capital allocation and public-sector technology demand.
Intel was purchased repeatedly throughout the quarter, mirroring U.S. policy priorities around domestic chip manufacturing and secured supply chains.
Software and consumer ai exposure rise
Activity also extended into enterprise software companies embedding ai into core operations. Positions were reported in Oracle, ServiceNow, Adobe and Workday, firms that use ai to power databases, workflow automation and creative tools.
Apple appeared as an increased holding, offering exposure to ai-driven interfaces and applications at the consumer device level, where on-device processing and ai assistants are expected to expand.
Broader market exposure and fixed income for balance
Despite the thematic tilt toward ai and semiconductors, Trump’s accounts maintained broad market exposure through S&P 500 and Russell 1000 etfs.
The filings show holdings in municipal bonds, corporate debt, high-yield etfs and preferred bank shares, indicating an effort to retain liquidity and diversify risk while concentrating growth exposure in technology infrastructure.
Departure from earlier blue-chip strategy
Compared with prior years, the first-quarter activity marks a clear break from Trump’s earlier pattern of holding diversified blue-chip positions across finance, health care and industrials.
The volume of trades and targeted capital shifts into specific technology subsectors are more consistent with active, theme-driven strategies that seek to ride multi-year investment and policy cycles.
Signal on where U.S. capital is moving
The disclosure points to a broader rotation within U.S. capital flows: away from cloud- and social media–centric platforms and toward semiconductors, infrastructure software and domestic manufacturing.
These areas sit at the “supply side” of the ai economy, supplying the chips, tools and systems needed to build and run large-scale ai models, data centers and corporate automation projects.
The pivot aligns with U.S. policy goals that emphasize onshore chip production, ai infrastructure and enterprise digitalization. It suggests capital is being reallocated from mature, consumer-facing platforms to businesses expected to benefit most from the next wave of technology investment and government support.
While exact entry and exit points cannot be determined because the report uses broad value ranges and periodic disclosures, the filing provides a directional map of how large pools of capital with policy links are positioning for the next phase of the ai and semiconductor buildout.
Strategic bet extends into digital assets and market infrastructure
That same preference for underlying infrastructure is becoming visible in Trump’s approach to digital assets, according to subsequent filings and corporate disclosures.
Trump now holds a personal Ethereum wallet valued between $1 million and $5 million, establishing a direct stake in one of the core networks underpinning decentralized finance and tokenized applications.
Family trust builds positions in digital asset ecosystem
Filings from the first quarter of 2026 show the Trump family trust repeatedly purchasing shares in key digital asset infrastructure companies.
These include Coinbase, a major U.S. crypto exchange operator; Strategy, a digital asset treasury and advisory firm; and Bitcoin miner MARA Holdings. Together, the positions span trading venues, balance-sheet management and core network security.
The pattern echoes the ai strategy: capital is flowing into the “picks and shovels” of the digital asset sector rather than purely speculative tokens.
Trump media adopts aggressive bitcoin treasury stance
At the corporate level, Trump Media and Technology Group has adopted a notably aggressive digital asset treasury policy.
As of March 2026, the company reported holding 9,542.16 Bitcoin, valued at roughly $647.1 million at the time. Bitcoin is treated as a central component of corporate reserves, embedding digital assets directly into the balance sheet and signaling long-term commitment to the asset class.
Policy agenda seeks durable, favorable framework
In parallel, the administration has pushed for a regulatory structure aimed at locking in a supportive environment for digital finance.
Trump has pledged to pursue a “future-proof” market structure law that would be difficult for later administrations to reverse. Drafts and proposals around measures such as the CLARITY Act seek to settle jurisdictional disputes between agencies and provide consistent rules for digital asset trading, custody and issuance.
In March 2025, an executive order created a U.S. Bitcoin strategic reserve, formally presenting Bitcoin as “digital gold” and tying it to national strategy. The move positioned Bitcoin as a quasi-strategic asset and signaled to markets that the federal government sees a role for it alongside more traditional reserves.
Capital and policy converge on digital infrastructure
Across personal, family trust and corporate balance sheets, Trump-linked entities are concentrating exposure in the foundational elements of both the ai and digital asset economies.
For market participants, the pattern is clear: capital and policy are converging on infrastructure layers — semiconductors, enterprise software, mining, exchanges and core protocols — rather than on short-lived, speculative applications.
This coordinated approach offers a read on where influential capital allocators see the most durable opportunity in the coming technology cycle, and where they expect regulatory and policy support to be most sustained.
Explore how policy-driven capital flows shape crypto by reading where will crypto be after Trump’s inauguration next.
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