Trump’s financial disclosure puts $1B crypto payday at center of CLARITY Act vote

clarity-act-legislative-tracker-trump-crypto-exposure.jpg


President Donald Trump’s 2025 annual financial disclosure was filed with the Office of Government Ethics on June 29 and certified on June 30, arriving as the CLARITY Act stalls over whether elected officials and their families should be allowed to hold, issue, promote, or profit from digital assets while writing the rules for those markets.

Trump received a 45-day extension and paid late-filing fees for transactions not previously reported on interim 278-T forms.

The agency ethics official still concluded, based on the report, that the filer complied with applicable laws and regulations. That line is available to anyone who wants to argue that the disclosure system worked exactly as intended.

Disclosure compliance is not conflict clearenceDisclosure compliance is not conflict clearence
A graphic contrasts Trump’s OGE compliance record against his crypto holdings, staking income, and stablecoin exposure, under the label “Same filing, two political uses.”

Opponents now have a target on the filing documents, which show that the president holds exposure across the same market categories that Congress is trying to classify, supervise, and regulate through CLARITY, including memecoins, NFTs, Bitcoin, Ethereum, staking, stablecoins, DeFi tokens, governance tokens, and World Liberty Financial-linked token-sale proceeds.

Disclosure compliance and conflict clearance are separate standards, and a president can file on time, pay late fees, and still hold massive financial interests in the markets his administration is shaping through legislation, executive appointments, and regulatory posture.

Trump cartoon illustrating CLARITY Act debate over disclosure of President Trump's crypto holdings and financial interestsTrump cartoon illustrating CLARITY Act debate over disclosure of President Trump's crypto holdings and financial interests

How deep the exposure runs

CIC Digital LLC, which licenses fees for NFTs and memecoins, discloses a Bitcoin cold wallet valued at over $50 million, an Ethereum cold wallet valued at $5 million to $25 million, a USDC cold wallet valued at $5 million to $25 million, and Ethereum staking rewards through Coinbase of $510,808.

Its largest line item is a license agreement with Celebration Coins that generated $635,068,835 in royalties, the TRUMP memecoin’s economic link to the filing.

DT Marks DeFi LLC, which holds a 38.25% interest in WLF Holdco LLC, discloses $65,625,000 from an equity sale and $236,250,000 from token-sale proceeds distributed by World Liberty Financial.

The token-sale distribution wallets disclose ETH and BTC valued at over $50 million, as well as additional WLF-distributed proceeds across LINK, AAVE, ENA, MOVE, and ONDO wallets.

Ethereum staking validator rewards under this section total $1,821,628, while DTTM Operations LLC holds 15,750,000,000 governance tokens of World Liberty Financial, valued at over $50 million.

The stablecoin layer appears through DT Marks SC LLC, which reports $196,875,000 in net proceeds from an equity sale in Stablecoin Holdco LLC.

The Stablecoin Holdco entity itself is valued at $5 million to $25 million and describes its underlying asset as a stablecoin business that generated $8,326,828 in net operating income. On the spouse disclosure, a license agreement for NFTs and collectibles generated $6,011,259 in net proceeds.

The filing spans every regulatory category CLARITY would govern: digital commodities, consumer protection, stablecoin oversight, DeFi token classification, and governance disclosure. An abstract ethics debate just became a balance sheet.

CLARITY-relevant category Filing exposure Reported value / income Why it matters
Memecoins / NFTs CIC Digital licensing, Celebration Coins royalties, spouse NFT license $635.1M royalties; $6.0M spouse NFT proceeds Connects consumer-protection and token-promotion debates to disclosed income
Bitcoin / Ethereum BTC and ETH cold wallets across CIC Digital and WLF-linked rows Multiple wallets, including over $50M BTC/ETH rows Touches digital commodity classification and market oversight
Staking Coinbase ETH staking and validator rewards $510,808; $1.82M Connects to yield, custody, and intermediary rules
Stablecoins USDC wallet, Stablecoin Holdco, stablecoin business income $196.9M proceeds; $8.3M operating income Puts the filing inside stablecoin oversight debates
DeFi tokens LINK, AAVE, ENA, MOVE, ONDO wallets Various wallet values and token-sale distributions Maps to token classification and DeFi-market rules
Governance tokens World Liberty Financial governance tokens 15.75B tokens, valued over $50M Raises control, governance, and disclosure questions
Token sales WLF token-sale proceeds $236.3M Directly links the filing to issuance and sale rules

What it means for the vote

The CLARITY Act cleared the Senate Banking Committee 15-9 on May 14, with all Republicans and two Democrats voting in favor.

Ruben Gallego of Arizona and Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland said their committee votes did not guarantee floor support without progress on outstanding issues, specifically an ethics provision addressing government officials’ ties to the crypto industry.

On the Senate floor, the bill needs 60 votes, meaning at least seven Democrats must cross over, and a Senate Banking Committee amendment from Sen. Chris Van Hollen that would have barred the president, vice president, and members of Congress from participating in crypto businesses failed on a straight 13-11 party-line vote at the markup.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.