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There’s More Evidence That Trump Is Profiting from the Presidency

There’s More Evidence That Trump Is Profiting from the Presidency

president trump makes an announcement at the kennedy center

Andrew Harnik//Getty Images

On a day when an appeals court threw El Caudillo del Mar-A-Lago yet another in his lifelong series of life preservers, it seems to me that this series of transactions might be worth a look. From NBC News:

The documents, released late Tuesday, show that Trump began the bond-buying spree one day after he was sworn in on January 20 and that it includes debt sold by companies, local governments, and entities that could be directly affected by his sweeping agenda. All told, Trump made about 690 purchases from January 21 through August 1. The active trading by a president of the United States is unprecedented, and it puts Trump in a direct position to benefit—or lose out—if any of the entities that own the bonds he has purchased succeed or fail. It’s also another example of Trump’s pursuing business endeavors and transactions to increase his wealth in office. “Ultimately, the president is not involved in these transactions,” a senior administration official told NBC News. “They’re managed completely independently of ”
On January 21, Trump purchased a bond belonging to the New York Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority. A week later, he purchased another handful of bonds over consecutive days. Those bonds belong to various municipal hospital facilities, airports, regional development funds and school districts from Florida to Alaska.

Is there more? Of course there is.

Trump’s buying continued at a steady clip for months, including bonds from megabanks Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup worth at least $100,000 apiece. Trump’s direct ownership of bonds from three of the country’s banking giants also comes as he considers an eventual replacement of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and weeks after he nominated one of his top aides, Stephen Miran, to a seat on the Fed’s board. The Fed can directly affect a bank’s profit by lowering or raising interest rates, along with myriad regulatory actions. As a Fed governor, Miran would have a direct say in many of those actions.

Seriously, though, what’s that possibility next to something in the small print of Adam Schiff’s mortgage papers or a line of code in Hunter Biden’s laptop?

Likewise, Trump’s ownership in hundreds of municipal bonds puts him in line to benefit when those municipal entities pay back the debt, and it comes when the administration has been tightly controlling the distribution of funds from the federal government to local and regional governments. Trump’s net worth is around $5.5 billion, according to the Forbes Billionaires List, up a staggering $3.2 billion since last year.
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