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business / news / / Benzinga

President Donald Trump has developed a habit of publicly boosting individual companies.

Trump's ethics filings reveal he bought stock before boosting companies with policy or praise.

KEY POINTS
President Donald Trump has developed a habit of publicly boosting individual companies, and his recent ethics filings show that in at least two cases, he bought in shortly before a boost, once from his own praise, once from a favorable policy decision. A government equity stake helped send Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) up roughly 190% this year, and the White House said on May 18 that the position, acquired for $8.9 billion, had swelled past $50 billion. The Filing That May Tip His Hand Trump’s first-quarter ethics disclosure, released in mid-May, logged more than 3,700 transactions in his name. The White House has said the portfolio is independently managed by a trust, that Trump provides no input, and that there are no conflicts of interest. Traders Are Pricing The Next Move The boosting has not been limited to single stocks. In a May 26 Truth Social post, Trump gave a full-throated defense of the prediction market industry, insisting the CFTC keep “exclusive authority” over platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket and branding opponents including Chris Christie, Tim Walz, and JB Pritzker “SCUM.” On Kalshi, a market asking which companies the US will take a stake in this year has drawn more than $740,000 in volume. Traders price Micron near 42%, with quantum names Rigetti and D-Wave above 80% and Nvidia at 13%. The Names Sitting In The Basket Oracle Corporation (NYSE:ORCL) has ties to the administration through co-founder Larry Ellison, a lead role in the Stargate AI infrastructure project, and its part in the deal to keep TikTok running in the US. Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO), recently valued above $2 trillion, supplies the custom chips behind the US data center buildout the administration has made a centerpiece of its tech agenda. Motorola Solutions (NYSE:MSI) which supplies police radios, dispatch software, and public-safety surveillance gear, fits the administration’s focus on law enforcement and border security. Whether the next mention reflects fundamentals or simply the pull of a presidential nod is the question investors may want to consider.
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