Reader Edition

Economy

Media Scrambles to Manufacture Scandal Over Routine Trump Portfolio Trades

Despite full transparency and zero personal involvement, critics attempt to cast standard investment management as suspicious.

EconomyPublished May 22, 2026 at 10:45 AMProcessed May 22, 2026 at 11:46 AM
Split screen. Donald Trump on the left. Michelle Fleury on the right.

The media is once again attempting to manufacture a controversy out of thin air, this time targeting President Donald Trump’s financial holdings. Recent government filings show that thousands of stock trades were executed on behalf of the President during the first quarter of this year.

Predictably, critics are attempting to frame these standard market activities as something nefarious. However, the facts remain clear: a spokesperson for the Trump Organization has confirmed that neither the President, his family, nor the company have any role in selecting, approving, or managing these investments.

The portfolio is handled independently, and the President receives no advance notice of trades. This is a classic case of the media attempting to vilify a successful businessman for the mere existence of a market-based investment strategy, even when that strategy is conducted with complete transparency and an absolute lack of personal interference.

Tags

trumpeconomymedia-biaswall-street

More in Economy

Two treated images of a SpaceX Starship on top of a Super Heavy booster at the launch pad, with a zoomed-in image of Elon Musk on the right.
EconomyYesterday

SpaceX IPO: Elon Musk’s Trillion-Dollar Gamble on the Future of AI

SpaceX is launching a historic $1.75 trillion initial public offering that pivots the company’s focus toward artificial intelligence and deep-space infrastructure.

Bank employees analyst data shown on multiple screens at the Hana Bank dealing room in South Korea
EconomyJune 8, 2026

Global Markets Reel as Tech Bubble Bursts and Middle East Conflict Escalates

Global stock markets are facing significant volatility as a tech-sector sell-off collides with renewed military strikes between Israel and Iran, driving up energy costs and investor anxiety.

Amelie with shoulder-length red hair in the foreground, facing the camera outdoors, wearing a black short-sleeved shirt and small facial piercings. Behind, a large modern concrete building with rectangular windows and tall vertical columns spans the width of the image. Several flagpoles with light-coloured flags stand near the entrance. A wide paved area leads up to the building, bordered by low greenery. The sky is bright blue with scattered white clouds.
EconomyJune 7, 2026

The Dutch Blueprint: Why Early Vocational Tracking Beats the 'College for All' Failure

The Netherlands maintains significantly lower youth unemployment rates than the UK by utilizing a structured, vocational-focused education system that mandates training and prioritizes real-world trade skills.