Shares for the media venture headed by former President Donald Trump jumped by as much as 20 percent on the second day of trading on the Nasdaq, again lifting the former president’s fortune on March 27 and providing him a potential windfall as he grapples with the costs of several legal cases.
Trump was worth about $6.4 billion at the end of trading on March 26, according to Epoch Times estimates, with a majority of his wealth coming from his stake in Trump Media. That’s a far cry from his social media business’s paper value but reflects the price paid in February by institutional investors before its public debut.
The company’s stock market debut follows its merger with blank-check company Digital World Acquisition Corp., which was announced in 2021 but suffered setbacks and delays. The former president helped create Truth Social, which is overseen by Trump Media & Technology Group, in 2022 after his Twitter account was suspended in early 2021 following the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol breach.
Digital World and the newly listed TMTG have together surged by almost 600 percent since the deal was announced, cementing TMTG’s status as one of Wall Street’s so-called meme stocks popular among retail traders and whose movement can be driven by posts on social media.
“The valuation of the business is rich relative to its underlying fundamentals, but I would not get in front of it in the near term,” said Thomas Hayes, chairman of Great Hill Capital, as reported by Reuters. “This valuation may be more of a proxy on the enthusiasm of supporters for Trump than a reasonable estimate of underlying business prospects.”
But Accelerate CEO Julian Klymochko told Benzinga that people investing in Trump Media are betting on President Trump and aren’t concerned about the firm’s valuation or losses.
Financial Issues
Although the former president’s net worth increased, he faces a number of criminal charges, legal fees, and a massive $455 million judgment that was handed down by a New York judge last month.President Trump asked a New York appeals court to allow him to post a smaller bond to appeal the case, which the court accepted. He now has to post the $175 million bond in order to appeal, according to the court’s ruling earlier this week.
In response, the former president said he would be “honored” to post bond and appeal his case before the new 10-day deadline granted by the court.
His attorneys had argued that he would face irreparable harm if he had to sell his properties at a lower value, which couldn’t be undone if he were to win the appeal.