
Nearly 70 Trump administration officials and nominees disclosed cryptocurrency holdings or investments in blockchain and digital asset companies, according to a Washington Post analysis.
Summary
- Washington Post found nearly 70 Trump officials and nominees disclosed crypto or blockchain-linked investments overall.
- Disclosed crypto-related holdings reached at least $193 million, based on minimum values in filings reviewed.
- Recent crypto.news coverage showed Trump-family accounts also bought crypto-linked equities in Q1 2026 this year.
The review covered financial disclosure forms for nearly 300 senior appointees and used minimum reported values because filings list assets in ranges.
The Post said the disclosed crypto-related holdings were worth at least $193 million. President Donald Trump reported at least $51 million tied to digital assets, while Vice President JD Vance and seven Cabinet members or nominees disclosed at least another $2 million in crypto wallets or investments.
Cabinet and policy roles draw attention
The report said more than one-third of Trump’s Cabinet disclosed crypto holdings or related investments. Vance reported Bitcoin holdings valued between $250,001 and $500,000, while Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reported up to $500,000 in digital assets before divesting, according to a Treasury spokesperson cited by the Post.
The review also identified crypto holdings among officials with roles in financial regulation, economic policy, and law enforcement. The Post said Bill Pulte, director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, reported between $1 million and $2 million in digital currencies.
Moreover, White House spokesman Harrison Fields told the Post that “conflicts of interest are never tolerated” in the administration. He also said Trump is taking action to establish regulatory clarity for digital financial technology and strengthen U.S. leadership in the digital asset economy.
The administration has also moved policy toward crypto. A White House fact sheet said Trump signed an executive order on March 6, 2025, to establish a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile.
Recent filings keep crypto ties in focus
The Washington Post analysis was updated in July 2025, but recent filings have kept Trump-linked crypto exposure in the news. Crypto.news reported that Trump-family disclosures showed multiple Q1 2026 purchases of crypto-linked stocks, including Coinbase, MARA Holdings, Strategy, Block, Robinhood, and SoFi.
The same report said Strategy appeared in eight separate transactions, including both purchases and sales. It also noted that the filing combines reportable accounts tied to Trump, Melania Trump, and dependent children, meaning the document does not identify who ordered each trade.

