logo
Trump Mobile joins the Oval Office sales parade

Trump Mobile joins the Oval Office sales parade

Business Times17-06-2025

THE president of the US' two eldest sons are getting into the mobile phone business.
Their company, Trump Mobile, is now offering a monthly plan, serviced by three existing telecommunications heavyweights – AT&T, Verizon Communications and T-Mobile US.
Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr, who are stewards of the family's holding company, the Trump Organization, said they would also offer customers a 'sleek, gold smartphone' that will be 'Made In The USA'. They are pitching their new enterprise as 'transformational'.
It really is not a transformational deal, however. Ryan Reynolds slapped his name on a similar service years ago, Mint Mobile, that added the magic dust of his celebrity and low rates to a service built on existing technology.
Reynolds did, however, score a big payday when he sold Mint to T-Mobile. That may be what the Trumps, who have no experience in the cellular business, had in mind with their new gig. They even flag Reynolds' company in their press release announcing it.
What truly separates Trump Mobile from competitors, though, is that President Donald Trump looms in the background – around this venture and all others his sons are pursuing.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
While the sons note in their press release that the Trump Organization is not involved with selling, developing or distributing Trump Mobile service and products, none of their current dealmaking would be as accessible or as profitable if the paterfamilias was not sitting in the White House.
Besides, the sons go out of their way to invoke Donald Trump's political movement by noting that Trump Mobile – a startup phone service, mind you – is 'building on the movement to put America first'. Apart from the challenges the Trumps are likely to face fashioning a mobile handset from parts sourced entirely in the US, what they are really putting first is their wallets.
In theory, the Trump sons are private citizens and free to make coin however they see fit, along with reaping the rewards or consequences of doing so. But they are not flying solo. And the fruits of their labour flow to their father, as Donald Trump's federal financial disclosure forms, released on Jun 13, showed.
The riches Donald Trump is harvesting as president represent a raw financial conflict of interest that shreds the integrity of his office and the bona fides of some of his core policy goals.
Presidents are not subject to ethics codes that govern other federal employees, because the Constitution's framers felt a strict set of rules would invariably hamstring the executive. (They did try to prevent foreign bribery with the Emoluments Clause, which seems quaint now.)
Still, presidents in the modern era have typically placed their financial holdings in a blind trust managed by an independent third party, which I highlighted in 2016 when Donald Trump was pursuing his first successful presidential bid.
Despite numerous opportunities to do as his predecessors from both political parties had done, Donald Trump did not distance himself in substance or practice from the operations of the Trump Organization or Trump-affiliated entities during his first presidential term.
Even Nelson Rockefeller – heir to a fortune far more substantial and consequential than Donald Trump's – sat for congressional grillings in 1974 about his family's operations. And he was only seeking confirmation to be vice-president. But that was the post-Watergate 1970s, and holding elected officials accountable for their business dealings was a non-partisan measure of good government and good faith. Times have changed.
Although the Trumps and the White House emphasise that Donald Trump's holdings are in a trust, it is a trust overseen by his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr, and is not, therefore, 'blind'. There simply is not a meaningful firewall separating Donald Trump from his businesses.
Even the porous financial buffer between him and foreign entities seeking favours from the US, or domestic operators seeking federal deals or regulatory or tax relief, that existed in his first term has given way to no buffer at all. (Spend some time with Bloomberg News reporter Max Abelson's account of the Trump financial locomotive for a thorough look at all of this.)
Some of the wheeling and dealing that used to take place at Donald Trump's Washington hotel during his first term now just take place inside the White House itself.
Consider the private dinner Donald Trump hosted at his Virginia golf club, followed by a tour of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue the next day, for cryptocurrency players willing to invest enough money in the $Trump memecoin to be considered one of its top 25 holders. (A larger group of 220 investors got the meal but not the tour.) The value of the memecoin rose 56 per cent when Donald Trump's Washington crypto fete was announced.
That came on the heels of Donald Trump's own push to give federal regulatory blessings and support to the crypto industry. The president is not a detached observer of any of this. His financial disclosures show he personally earned at least US$57.7 million from his family's crypto dealings last year.
Trump Media & Technology Group, a publicly traded firm that began as a holding company for a social media platform, Truth Social, has made a push into crypto that appears to have helped keep its valuation aloft. Donald Trump has moved recently to unload most of his majority holding in Trump Media – a stake now worth more than US$2 billion.
Donald Trump's crypto machinations may be his most lucrative and glaring financial conflict, but it is far from the only one. The financial disclosure forms also showed tens of millions of dollars in royalty payments from Trump-branded watches, sneakers, fragrances, non-fungible tokens and a guitar.
A Save America coffee table book and a Trump Bible also contributed to the haul. Donald Trump has always been a human shingle, willing to license his name on almost anything to almost any bidder. But most of the flotsam he is selling now benefits from an Oval Office sales boost.
There is also old-fashioned pay-to-play mud baths that have always surrounded Washington.
Elon Musk, who donated lavishly to Donald Trump's re-election bid, has lots of business with the government, and for a time oversaw the president's federal downsizing efforts. There is the US$400 million Qatari jet Donald Trump has accepted as a budget-friendly replacement for the existing Air Force One, but it will revert to his presidential library when he leaves office.
He has weakened environmental regulations for oil companies, as he promised to do while fundraising with oil majors at a Mar-a-Lago gathering during the 2024 campaign. Business leaders are reportedly paying millions of dollars to a political action committee for the privilege of dining with him at the same Palm Beach resort.
Donald Trump's state visit to the Middle East last month followed his two sons' successful pursuit of real estate deals in the region before the president travelled there.
And so on.
So what are the chances that Donald Trump will use his sons' new mobile venture as a reason to lean on AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile to give his children or the market they inhabit favourable treatment in exchange for some form of regulatory or business relief? Probably just as good as the chances of money from the cellular startup finding its way into Donald Trump's coffers.
It is a sorry state of public affairs and, until the rules are changed and enforced, Donald Trump and his family will continue feathering their nest. BLOOMBERG
The writer, a senior executive editor of Bloomberg Opinion, is author of TrumpNation: The Art of Being the Donald

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Altcoins, once seen as rivals to Bitcoin, suffer $382 billion crypto wipeout
Altcoins, once seen as rivals to Bitcoin, suffer $382 billion crypto wipeout

Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • Straits Times

Altcoins, once seen as rivals to Bitcoin, suffer $382 billion crypto wipeout

Most of the so-called altcoins – the catch-all term for all digital assets outside of Bitcoin and stablecoins - are nursing steep declines. PHOTO: REUTERS New York – On the face of it, 2025 looks like a banner year for crypto: Bitcoin hitting a record, an industry-boosting US president whose family is venturing headlong into the sector, and key legislation widely expected to be passed by the US Congress. But look beyond the bullish headlines and the rally in Bitcoin, and a vastly different landscape comes into view. Most of the so-called altcoins – the catch-all term for all digital assets outside of Bitcoin and stablecoins - once touted as competitors to the original cryptoasset are nursing steep declines, with more than US$300 billion (S$382.9 billion) of market value wiped out so far in 2025. The sea of red points to a wider malaise that's forcing parts of the industry to confront existential questions. Crypto was imagined by early enthusiasts as a universe where a host of coins competed for investor money, offering a diverse set of use cases. But as Bitcoin reigns supreme, that's giving way to predictions that large swathes of the sector will become a digital wasteland. 'I think they're just going to die, frankly,' Nick Philpott, co-founder of trading platform Zodia Markets, said of altcoins. 'They'll just wither away. Technically, a lot of this stuff will just sit there and gather dust in perpetuity.' Bitcoin's share of the total market value of cryptoassets has climbed by nine percentage points this year to 64 per cent, the highest since January 2021, according to CoinMarketCap. Back then, cryptocurrencies were a largely unregulated space, crypto lending was roaring with few safeguards and nonfungible tokens were just starting to take off. In sharp contrast, altcoins are faltering. A MarketVector index tracking the bottom half of the largest 100 digital assets, which more than doubled in the aftermath of Donald Trump's Nov 5 election victory, has since given up all those gains and is down around 50 per cent in 2025. With Bitcoin soaking up the bulk of capital flows from investors in exchange-traded funds (ETFs), other parts of the market are increasingly left behind. Even Ether, the second-largest cryptocurrency, remains about 50 per cent below its all-time high after a modest rebound fueled by inflows to spot ETFs investing in the token. 'Historically, Bitcoin's moved and then that's passed down into altcoins,' said Jake Ostrovskis, an OTC trader at Wintermute. 'We've not really seen that yet this cycle.' Crypto is no stranger to mass extinction events. The 2022 market crash, punctuated by the implosions of algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD and Sam Bankman-Fried's FTX exchange, led to the demise of hundreds of projects. Thousands of coins still exist on their blockchains, with little or no activity – relegated to the status of 'ghost chains' in crypto parlance. What's different this time is that crypto is becoming a more regulated, institutionally-driven marketplace, and that stablecoins appear to be the only tokens with a real shot at achieving means-of-payment status, due to the fact that they eliminate volatility. In the past year alone, the market value of stablecoins has swelled by US$47 billion, and some of the world's largest banks are entering the field. The Wall Street Journal reported this month that is studying a potential stablecoin. That's putting pressure on altcoin projects to find ways to shore up their status and appeal to a wider base of investors. 'I've talked to a couple of projects that have been thinking about merging foundations, putting it up for governance, saying, 'Hey, we can now be governed under this other authority' – that authority being another altcoin community,' said Kanyi Maqubela, managing partner at venture capital firm Kindred Ventures. The shifting tides are also reflected in corporate behaviour. Modeled on Michael Saylor's Strategy, a new breed of Bitcoin accumulators has emerged. In April, a special-purpose acquisition company affiliated with Cantor Fitzgerald partnered with Tether Holdings and SoftBank to launch Twenty One Capital, seeded with nearly US$4 billion in Bitcoin. The Trump family, which is also getting involved in Bitcoin mining, has raised US$2.3 billion via Trump Media & Technology Group to create a Bitcoin treasury. While similar vehicles have been set up recently to accumulate smaller tokens like Ether, Solana and BNB, they are much smaller. Glimmers of hope Not all altcoins are floundering. Tokens like Maker and Hyperliquid that are linked to thriving decentralized-finance protocols have notched big gains this year. 'There's certainly a subset of the market doing incredibly well – generally companies with real businesses, real revenues, and those revenues are being used to buy back tokens,' said Jeff Dorman, chief investment officer of digital asset investment firm Arca. There's also the prospect of more favourable regulations. The potential for US Securities and Exchange Commission approval of ETFs backed by coins like Solana are stirring hopes of wider adoption. Another possible catalyst is the Digital Asset Market Clarity (Clarity) Act, informally referred to as crypto's market structure bill. The Clarity Act aims to provide a comprehensive regulatory framework, including delineating responsibilities between the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the SEC. 'The Clarity Act has the potential to do for altcoins what ETFs did for Bitcoin and Ethereum: provide the regulatory legitimacy that unlocks real institutional capital,' said Ira Auerbach, a senior executive at Offchain Labs. Yet according to Kindred Venture's Mr Maqubela, the issue ultimately boils down to utility. He compares Bitcoin to gold and Ether to copper – the former has a capped final supply and the latter's blockchain underpins much of crypto's functionality – and says most altcoins are stuck in a sort of twilight zone, underpinned by big promises and not much else. 'I think a lot of them are going to whittle down to zero because they were driven by speculation without that mimetic value like Bitcoin, and they tried to be utilitarian without achieving any real scale,' he said. BLOOMBERG Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

China shows off tech resilience in face of trump export controls
China shows off tech resilience in face of trump export controls

Business Times

timean hour ago

  • Business Times

China shows off tech resilience in face of trump export controls

[BEIJING] As Donald Trump brandishes US export controls on technology as a bargaining chip to wrest supplies of rare earth magnets from Beijing, China is showcasing what it can do without the most advanced American semiconductors. On a government-organised trip this month to Jiangsu and Zhejiang, two of China's richest provinces that spawned artificial intelligence (AI) darling DeepSeek, authorities lined up a host of executives from technology companies to meet with journalists from Bloomberg News and other media outlets. The message was ultimately one of defiance: China's technology sector still aims at world dominance despite US curbs. Take Magiclab Robotics Technology, a firm in the eastern city of Suzhou, founded barely more than a year ago. Its president, Wu Changzheng, said it had independently developed more than 90 per cent of the parts it uses to make humanoid robots. The rest consists of semiconductors and microcontroller units procured domestically and overseas, he said, adding that they do not use US chips. 'China doesn't have many weak links in this industry,' Wu said, as he demonstrated a human-sized robot destined for factory floors. He brushed off Trump's recent ban on US firms exporting semiconductor design software to China, saying his robots only require 'standard chips'. Other entrepreneurs emphasised self-reliance over the five-day trip with companies spanning bio-pharmaceuticals, humanoid robotics, AI and autos – all sectors pivotal to President Xi Jinping's manufacturing ambitions. Many in China's business sector have rallied around Xi's government in the face of Trump's tariffs and expanding US export curbs. Access to so many executives at once is typically difficult for foreign journalists in a country where media access is tightly regulated and company officials can be reluctant to speak freely for fear of reprisal. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up The trip exemplifies Beijing's desire to boost global investor confidence in its US$19 trillion economy, which has been plagued by a property crash, deflation and now the US's highest tariffs in a century. Although DeepSeek's surprise AI breakthrough earlier this year proved China can innovate with a limited supply of chips, Beijing still faces difficulty catching the US while being denied access to Nvidia's most advanced semiconductors. On the press tour, the Chinese government mostly presented firms that do not require top-tier chips, such as AISpeech, which makes in-car AI-powered audio and video tools. For companies pioneering autonomous driving models or artificial general intelligence systems that possess human-level cognitive abilities, accessing the latest chips is likely to be far more important. Tiptoeing around sensitive topics such as state subsidies, eight tech executives who addressed reporters throughout the trip downplayed the impact of a yearslong US campaign to curtail China's technological ascent, emphasising the country's increased self-reliance as government officials listened attentively on the sidelines. The executives spoke about how they are instead leveraging local advantages they consider disruption-proof, from a vast talent pool to supply chains walled off from the outside world. Yu Kai, AISpeech's co-founder and chief scientific officer, said the company has hired more than 700 people in research centres in Beijing and Suzhou, after starting off with fewer than 10 people developing an algorithm in Cambridge. It has set up a subsidiary in Shenzhen for its proximity to smart equipment manufacturing and also runs a unit in southern China to produce software for cars built by a local auto-making partner. Illustrating the deep concern in Beijing on US tech controls, Xi has restricted China's rare earth magnets in recent months in a bid to unwind some of Trump's recent export curbs. US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said last week that the US and China signed a document to codify trade terms reached last month in Geneva, including a commitment from Beijing to deliver rare earths used in everything from wind turbines to jet planes. China's economic stamina was a common theme of the trip that began in Nanjing, a city in Jiangsu, where researchers publish three times more scientific papers than those in New York. Ferried by two buses, dozens of journalists went to Suzhou and neighbouring Zhejiang province by high-speed train, as the focus of discussions shifted more to the development of green technologies. There's debate in China over how it matters to access state-of-the-art chipmaking machines and Nvidia's most advanced AI accelerators. Ren Zhengfei, the founder of Huawei Technologies, recently said Chinese firms can adopt means such as chip stacking to get results similar to the most cutting-edge semiconductors. Beijing also blocks most AI services from US rivals, meaning domestic players do not have to compete against American leaders. China has to put on a display of 'confidence and window dressing' after years of tech curbs, according to Julian Mueller-Kaler, director of the Strategic Foresight Hub at the Stimson Center in Washington. High-end chips for AI data centres, for example, can be replaced with less capable models, at the expense of more energy usage, he said. 'The reason the Chinese didn't really retaliate that much after the chips restrictions a few years ago is Beijing actually likes them, to a certain degree,' he said. 'It forces Chinese companies to develop their own capabilities and reduce the reliance on American tech – a political goal Chinese decision-makers had for a long time but was hindered by economic realities.' Still, for all the savvy on display, few companies will emerge unscathed from deteriorating ties with the US. Some executives on the trip mentioned they were feeling the pain as Trump's America First policy seeks to limit US investment in China's high-tech sectors. 'The impact on financing is significant,' said Zhang Jinhua, chairwoman of Iaso Biotechnology, which makes a life-saving cancer treatment. 'I tell my team to stop asking when this winter ends. We must treat winter as the four seasons and adapt to prolonged uncertainty.' BLOOMBERG

China's weak factory activity maintains pressure for more stimulus as tariff risks weigh
China's weak factory activity maintains pressure for more stimulus as tariff risks weigh

Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • Straits Times

China's weak factory activity maintains pressure for more stimulus as tariff risks weigh

Uncertainty lingers among factory owners, as they wait on a more durable trade deal with the US. PHOTO: AFP BEIJING - China's manufacturing activity shrank for a third straight month in June, though at a slower pace, as increases in new orders, purchasing volumes and supplier delivery times signalled that policy support rolled out since late 2024 is taking effect. But business sentiment remains subdued, the June 30 survey showed, with employment, factory gate prices and new export orders still languishing, and keeping alive calls for even more stimulus as authorities deal with US President Donald Trump's tariff onslaught and chronic weakness in the property sector. The National Bureau of Statistics purchasing managers' index (PMI) rose to 49.7 in June from 49.5 in May, matching the median forecast in a Reuters poll but remaining below the 50-mark that separates growth from contraction. 'Two months of successive improvement, that's a decent reading given June was the first full month without Trump's prohibitive 100 per cent-plus tariffs,' said Xu Tianchen, senior economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit. 'There is still evidence of front-loading in trade, but the tariffs are lower now and manufacturers are preparing to ship holiday season goods,' he added. The new export orders sub-index remained in contraction for a 14th straight month in June, inching up to 47.7 from 47.5 in May, while employment diverged from other indicators by deteriorating further. However, new domestic orders rose to 50.2 from 49.8, and purchasing volumes jumped from 47.6 to 50.2 – offering policymakers some hope that domestic demand may be starting to recover. Huang Zichun, China economist at Capital Economics, said the PMIs suggested the world's second-largest economy had regained some momentum over the past month, but warned tensions with the West would continue to squeeze its exports and there were still signs of deflationary pressures. The non-manufacturing PMI, which includes services and construction, grew to 50.5 from 50.3. Activity in the food and beverages, travel, hospitality and logistics sectors fell this month, NBS senior statistician Zhao Qinghe said in a statement. However, this drag was offset by a pickup in the construction PMI, which rose to a 3-month high of 52.8, Capital Economics' Mr Huang said. 'Fiscal support looks to have continued to support infrastructure spending,' Mr Huang added, but cautioned that 'a fading fiscal tailwind is likely to slow activity in the second half of the year.' Uncertainty also lingers among factory owners, as the business outlook index - which normally moves in line with the headline PMI - dropped in June and suggested producers were waiting on a more durable trade deal to a fragile framework agreed between Beijing and Washington earlier this month. That puts pressure on policymakers to roll out more support measures, as the government cannot afford for China's vast manufacturing sector to stagnate or shrink, if its ambitious 2025 growth target of 'around 5 per cent' is to be met. Policymakers are confident they can push ahead with reforms launched late in 2024 to transition China's economy from a manufacturing-led model to a consumer-driven one, Premier Li Qiang told delegates at World Economic Forum and Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank meetings last week. Such a shift in the engines of growth, which economists say is crucial to securing China's future, could be progressed while maintaining strong growth, Premier Li said. But economists say the transition could take years, and that reform typically comes at the cost of a more subdued economy in the short term. 'Exports are expected to decelerate in the second half of the year, and domestic deflationary pressures will intensify,' said Dan Wang, China director at Eurasia Group, who expects more stimulus in coming months. 'Household consumption cannot be a real short-term driver, but fiscal spending in things like infrastructure can deliver the kind of growth required to hit this year's target.' REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store