WASHINGTON — May 14, 2026 — President Donald Trump disclosed 3,642 securities transactions during the first quarter of 2026 with an aggregate notional value of between $220 million and roughly $750 million, according to a 113-page Office of Government Ethics Form 278-T filing made public Thursday — a trading footprint that breaks roughly six decades of presidential blind-trust norms and that lands at exactly the moment Trump is leading a high-stakes summit in Beijing alongside Nvidia Corp. chief executive Jensen Huang and a delegation of U.S. corporate leaders whose companies feature prominently in the disclosure. The filing, certified by Trump on May 8 and received by OGE on May 12, includes a handwritten notation on the cover page reading “Filer paid late fees,” indicating the legally required 30-to-45-day reporting window was exceeded.
The single most consequential purchase listed in the filing is a position of $1 million to $5 million in Nvidia, bought before Huang was added to the Beijing trip and before Trump-Xi summit discussions of AI chip export policy and U.S.-China semiconductor relations. Nvidia closed at a record high Thursday after Cantor Fitzgerald raised its price target to $350 from $300. Trump also bought $1 million to $5 million of Boeing Co. stock during the quarter — a position the company’s commercial aircraft division saw vindicated this week when Trump told Fox News during the Beijing trip that China had agreed to purchase 200 Boeing jets, a deal that would represent one of the largest commercial aircraft orders in years. Boeing shares have risen 8.84% over the past month on summit anticipation, with the company’s order backlog already at a record $695 billion.
The disclosure spans virtually every sector of U.S. policy currently driven from the White House. In the AI and semiconductor complex, Trump added $1 million-to-$5 million positions in Microsoft Corp., Oracle Corp., Broadcom Inc., Apple Inc., Synopsys Inc., Cadence Design Systems Inc., Texas Instruments Inc., SanDisk Corp., Intel Corp., and Dell Technologies Inc. In financial services, the president added JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Visa Inc., and Bank of America Corp. In defense and aerospace, beyond Boeing, he added GE Aerospace and Palantir Technologies Inc. In the digital-asset and retail-investing complex — sectors where his administration is actively rolling out new policy — he bought Coinbase Global Inc., Robinhood Markets Inc., and SoFi Technologies Inc., alongside a $1 million-to-$5 million position in an unnamed S&P 500 index fund. Aggregate purchases in Oracle alone are estimated at $2.2 million to $10.6 million, with Microsoft at $2.4 million to $8.1 million, Amazon.com Inc. at $2.5 million to $8.3 million, and Nvidia at $1.8 million to $6.6 million, according to a line-by-line review of the filing by Benzinga.
The disclosure also shows large sales — between $5 million and $25 million each in Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta Platforms Inc. — alongside the new purchases in those same names, indicating active rebalancing rather than directional exit. International exposure was added through 19 transactions across nine ETFs concentrated in a seven-trading-day window between January 29 and March 10, with the largest single foreign-linked position in the iShares Core MSCI Emerging Markets ETF, ticker IEMG.
The most contested individual position involves Dell Technologies. The filing records multiple seven-figure Dell purchases beginning February 10. On May 8 — the same day Trump certified the disclosure — the president publicly praised Dell at a White House event, and the stock rose roughly 12% that session. The Dell family separately pledged $6.25 billion to the administration’s Trump Accounts retirement program in December 2025, a program for which Robinhood — another stock added in the disclosure — serves as initial trustee. Ethics critics have flagged the overlap.
The trading footprint is a sharp departure from modern presidential practice. Lyndon B. Johnson set the post-war template by placing personal holdings in a qualified blind trust, and every president since has followed some version of that model. Jimmy Carter went further and liquidated his peanut farm. Barack Obama held Treasury notes and broad index funds. Joseph R. Biden used a blind-trust arrangement throughout his term. Trump’s assets are held in a trust controlled by his children, and several entries in the new filing indicate that a broker acted as agent on specific transactions, but the disclosure does not identify the relevant accounts or specify who placed individual trades. A spokesperson for the Office of Government Ethics declined to address whether the filings reflect direct trading by the president or activity conducted through managed or discretionary structures, stating only that the agency is committed to transparency and citizen oversight. The White House has defended the disclosures as full compliance with the STOCK Act.
For markets, the disclosure tightens an already complicated political-economy loop. Trump has personally rebuked New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s tax-the-rich rhetoric, threatened tariffs on multiple major U.S. trading partners, and is currently negotiating a tariff rollback with China worth roughly $30 billion in non-critical trade categories — all while his Q1 disclosure shows him with new direct exposure to the U.S. and international companies most affected by those decisions. Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, and Oracle alone are sensitive to executive tariff and trade policy in ways that the broad reporting bands of the 278-T format may obscure. Congressional ethics committees and the public will now determine whether the pattern triggers a formal review or simply becomes the new baseline.
— JBizNews Desk
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