logo
Trump Media to raise $2.5bn to invest in Bitcoin

Trump Media to raise $2.5bn to invest in Bitcoin

Al Jazeera27-05-2025

The Trump Media and Technology Group will raise about $2.5bn to invest in Bitcoin, United States President Donald Trump's social media firm says, as it looks to diversify its revenue streams with a push into the financial sector.
The company is raising the funds by selling $1.5bn in stock at its last closing price and $1bn in convertible notes priced at a 35 percent premium, it said in a statement on Tuesday. The money will be used to build a 'Bitcoin treasury', the company said.
The Bitcoin will be held on Trump Media's balance sheet alongside existing cash and short-term investments totalling $759m at the end of the first quarter. Crypto platforms Anchorage Digital and Crypto.com are to provide custody for the Bitcoin holdings.
'We view Bitcoin as an apex instrument of financial freedom,' Trump Media CEO Devin Nunes said, hailing the move as a 'big step forward' in the company's plan to acquire 'crown jewel assets consistent with America First principles'.
Shares of the company behind Truth Social, a streaming and social media platform, were down 6 percent in early trading.
Trump Media has been exploring potential mergers and acquisitions as it aims to diversify into financial services.
Last month, it reached a binding agreement to launch retail investment products, including cryptocurrency and exchange-traded funds aligned with Trump's policies.
The Trump family, long rooted in skyscrapers and golf clubs, has opened multiple beachheads in cryptocurrencies, quickly gaining hundreds of millions of dollars. Its other crypto forays include Trump nonfungible tokens (NFTs), a meme coin, a stake in a newly formed Bitcoin producer called American Bitcoin and the cryptocurrency exchange World Liberty Financial.
But the crypto push has attracted scrutiny from lawmakers, including Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, who last month asked the US securities regulator about its plans to supervise exchange-traded funds (ETFs) due to be launched by Trump Media.
Trump, who referred to cryptocurrencies in his first term as 'not money', citing their volatility and a value 'based on thin air', has shifted his views on the technology.
During an event at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida during his presidential campaign in May 2024, Trump received assurances that crypto industry backers would spend lavishly to get him re-elected.
Last week, Trump rewarded 220 of the top investors in one of his other cryptocurrency projects, the $Trump meme coin, with a swanky dinner with him at his luxury golf club in northern Virginia, spurring accusations that the president was mixing his duties in the White House with personal profit.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump says US intelligence community is ‘wrong' on Iran
Trump says US intelligence community is ‘wrong' on Iran

Al Jazeera

time5 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

Trump says US intelligence community is ‘wrong' on Iran

Trump says US intelligence community is 'wrong' on Iran NewsFeed US President Donald Trump says he doesn't care if his claims that Iran is close to building a nuclear weapon contradict US intelligence assessments, which the president characterised as 'wrong.' Video Duration 00 minutes 40 seconds 00:40 Video Duration 01 minutes 42 seconds 01:42 Video Duration 00 minutes 42 seconds 00:42 Video Duration 01 minutes 22 seconds 01:22 Video Duration 00 minutes 33 seconds 00:33 Video Duration 01 minutes 32 seconds 01:32 Video Duration 00 minutes 22 seconds 00:22

Zohran Mamdani's mayoral bid is bigger than New York
Zohran Mamdani's mayoral bid is bigger than New York

Al Jazeera

time5 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

Zohran Mamdani's mayoral bid is bigger than New York

Sitting in northern Europe, I shouldn't care about the New York mayoral race. Yet, despite all that is happening in the world, the contentious Democratic primary for the 2025 New York City mayoral election has found its way into conversations around me – and onto my social media feed. This attention isn't just another example of the New York-centric worldview famously skewered in Saul Steinberg's 1976 New Yorker cover, View of the World from 9th Avenue. A genuine political struggle is under way, one that has the potential to reverberate far beyond the Hudson River. At its centre is the increasingly polarised contest between Andrew Cuomo and Zohran Mamdani. The name Cuomo may ring a bell. He resigned as New York's governor in 2021 following multiple allegations of sexual harassment. While he expressed remorse at the time, his political comeback has been marked by defiance – suing one of his accusers and the state attorney general who found the accusations credible. He claims the scandal was a 'political hit job'. Cuomo's record in office was far from unblemished. He diverted millions of dollars from the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), jeopardising the financial health of New York's essential public transit system. He formed the Moreland Commission to root out corruption but disbanded it abruptly when it began probing entities linked to his own campaign. During the COVID-19 pandemic, his administration was accused of undercounting nursing home deaths, allegedly to deflect criticism of policies that returned COVID-positive patients to those facilities. Given that legacy, one might imagine Cuomo's chances of becoming mayor would be slim. Yet, he currently leads in the polls. Close behind him is Zohran Mamdani, a Democratic Socialist and state assemblyman from Queens. When he entered the race in March, Cuomo led by 40 points. A recent poll now puts Mamdani within 8 points. Born in Kampala and raised in New York, Mamdani is the first Muslim candidate to run for mayor of the city. But his significance extends beyond his identity. What distinguishes Mamdani is his unapologetically progressive platform – and his refusal to dilute it in the name of 'electability'. His appeal rests on substance, charisma, sharp messaging, and a mass volunteer-led canvassing operation. At the heart of Mamdani's campaign is a vision of a city that works for working-class New Yorkers. He proposes freezing rents for all rent-stabilised apartments, building 200,000 affordable homes, creating publicly-owned grocery stores 'focused on keeping prices low, not making profit', and making buses free. He supports free childcare for children under five, better wages for childcare workers, and 'baby baskets' containing essentials for new parents. To fund these initiatives, Mamdani proposes increasing the corporate tax rate from 7.25 percent to 11.5 percent, and imposing a 2 percent income tax on New York City residents earning more than $1m annually. He also wants to raise the minimum wage, regulate gig economy giants like DoorDash, and protect delivery workers. His plan to establish a Department of Community Safety would shift resources away from traditional policing towards mental health and violence prevention. He further promises to 'Trump-proof' New York by enhancing the city's sanctuary status, removing ICE's influence, expanding legal support for migrants, defending LGBTQ+ rights and protecting reproductive healthcare access. But championing such bold policies – as a brown, Muslim candidate – has made Mamdani a lightning rod for hate. Recently, in a rare show of emotion, Mamdani teared up while recounting threats he has received: 'I get messages that say the only good Muslim is a dead Muslim. I get threats on my life … on the people that I love.' The NYPD is investigating two voicemails from an unidentified caller, who labelled Mamdani a 'terrorist', threatened to bomb his car, and ominously warned: 'Watch your back every second until you get the f..k out of America.' Cuomo's campaign has also played into Islamophobic tropes. A mailer targeting Jewish voters from a Cuomo-aligned super PAC doctored Mamdani's photo – darkening and lengthening his beard – and declared that he 'rejects NYPD, rejects Israel, rejects capitalism and rejects Jewish rights'. Much of this centres on Mamdani's outspoken support for Palestinian rights. He has been criticised for refusing to affirm Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state and for defending the slogan 'globalise the intifada', which he describes as 'a desperate desire for equality and equal rights'. He also noted that the Arabic term intifada has been used by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum to describe the 1944 Warsaw Uprising. Despite the attacks, Mamdani's movement is surging. He has received endorsements from Senator Bernie Sanders, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Congresswoman Nydia Velasquez, Attorney General Letitia James, the New York Working Families Party, United Auto Workers Region 9A, and Jewish Voice for Peace Action. In contrast, Cuomo is backed by major real estate donors wary of Mamdani's housing agenda. His campaign has received $1m from DoorDash, presumably in response to Mamdani's proposed labour protections. Other prominent donors include Home Depot co-founder Ken Langone and hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman – both known for supporting Donald Trump. Still, Mamdani's grassroots campaign has continued to gain ground. Whether or not he wins the nomination, his candidacy has already achieved something vital: it has offered proof that an anti-corporate, anti-Trump, community-powered campaign – one rooted in progressive values and refusal to compromise – can resonate with American voters. But the stakes extend far beyond New York. Across Europe, South America, South Asia and Africa, right-wing populists are gaining ground by exploiting economic precarity, stoking culture wars and vilifying minorities. Mamdani's campaign offers a clear counter-narrative: one that marries economic justice with moral clarity, mobilises diverse communities and challenges the politics of fear. For progressives around the world, it is a rare and instructive blueprint – not just for resistance, but for rebuilding. The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial stance.

US judge blocks Trump's bid to ban Harvard from enrolling foreign students
US judge blocks Trump's bid to ban Harvard from enrolling foreign students

Al Jazeera

time9 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

US judge blocks Trump's bid to ban Harvard from enrolling foreign students

A federal judge in the United States has blocked President Donald Trump's bid to block Harvard from enrolling foreign students, delivering the prestigious university another victory as it challenges multiple government sanctions amid a battle with the White House. Friday's order by District Judge Allison Burroughs in Boston preserves Harvard's ability to host international students while a lawsuit filed by the Ivy League school plays out in the courts. Burroughs, however, added that the federal government still had the authority to review Harvard's foreign admission policies through normal processes outlined in law. Harvard found itself embroiled in a polarising debate about academic freedom and the right to protest against Israel's ongoing genocide in Gaza as its pro-Palestine students demanded full disclosure of the country's oldest and wealthiest university's investments in companies linked to Israel and divestment from those companies. Trump and his allies claim that Harvard, and other US universities that saw similar protests, are unaccountable bastions of liberal, anti-conservative bias and 'anti-Semitism'. In May, Harvard sued the Department of Homeland Security after the agency abruptly withdrew the school's certification to enrol foreign students and issue paperwork for their visas, skirting most of its usual procedures. The action would have forced Harvard's roughly 7,000 international students – about a quarter of its total enrolment and a major source of income – to transfer or risk being in the US without the necessary documents. New foreign students would have been barred from coming to Harvard. The university said it was experiencing illegal retaliation for rejecting the White House's demands to overhaul Harvard policies related to campus protests, admissions and hiring. Trump, who has cut about $3.2bn of federal grants for Harvard and tried numerous tactics to block the institution from hosting international students, said that his administration has been holding negotiations with Harvard. 'Many people have been asking what is going on with Harvard University and their largescale improprieties that we have been addressing, looking for a solution,' Trump said in a post on Friday on Truth Social. 'We have been working closely with Harvard, and it is very possible that a Deal will be announced over the next week or so,' he said. 'If a Settlement is made on the basis that is currently being discussed, it will be 'mindbogglingly' HISTORIC, and very good for our Country.' Trump did not provide any details about the purported 'deal'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store