President Donald Trump’s 2025 financial disclosure has revealed a $635 million royalty windfall from Celebration Coins, the entity behind the Official Trump (TRUMP) memecoin. The filing, reported on July 4, 2026, also shows Trump earned at least $1.4 billion in crypto-related income—more than half of the $2.2 billion he reported overall. That sum includes $527 million from token sales by World Liberty Financial and roughly $263 million from stakes in related companies.
While Trump profited regardless of price direction, retail buyers suffered massive losses. Blockchain analytics firm Nansen counted 988,905 wallets that lost a combined $3.81 billion by the end of June, with roughly two in three wallets still in the red. Early buyers and automated traders accounted for most of the $4 billion in profits captured by the lucky minority. The token, which peaked at $75.35 on January 19, 2025, now trades near $1.76—a 97% collapse.
TRUMP’s weekly chart shows a potential turning point. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) sits at 30.78, flirting with oversold territory for the first time since launch. Price is compressing inside a steep descending channel, with the weekly Parabolic SAR at $1.53 as immediate support. On the daily, the token is pinned under a stack of declining exponential moving averages: the 20-day EMA at $1.77, 50-day at $1.94, and 200-day at $3.45. Despite a 9.20% weekly bounce to $1.78, the structure remains bearish without a clear reversal signal.
The pain extends to World Liberty Financial (WLFI). Nansen found that 85% of 26,663 WLFI wallets tracked lost approximately $83 million, against just $23 million in realized gains. WLFI changed hands around $0.056, down 88% from its September 2025 high. Nicholas Pinto, who put roughly $500,000 into TRUMP after supporting Trump’s 2024 campaign, called the project “almost a legal scam.”
As the Senate refines a crypto market structure bill, Democrats are pushing for ethical guardrails. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand renewed calls to ban senior officials from profiting off digital assets, co-sponsoring the End Crypto Corruption Act. Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott aims for a full Senate vote this month, but lawmakers like Ruben Gallego say they won’t support it without strict ethics provisions. The White House defended Trump, stating he turned the U.S. into the “crypto capital of the world.”