A quarterly ethics filing tied to the Trump family trust disclosed purchases of Coinbase and other crypto-related stocks during Q1 2026, adding to ongoing scrutiny of the intersection between political figures and digital asset markets.
The disclosure appeared in a periodic transaction report filed with the Office of Government Ethics on April 20, 2026. The filing, a standard 278-T form, listed equity transactions made through a family trust structure.
Coinbase was explicitly named among the crypto-related stock purchases. According to reporting on the filing, the trust also purchased shares of Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) and Marathon Digital (MARA), both companies with significant Bitcoin exposure.
The filing is a disclosure of completed transactions, not a real-time market announcement. Ethics filings of this type typically report purchases and sales within value ranges rather than exact dollar amounts, which limits the precision of any market impact analysis.
Coinbase is the largest publicly traded cryptocurrency exchange in the United States. Owning Coinbase stock is widely viewed as a proxy for broad crypto market exposure, since the company’s revenue is directly tied to trading volume and digital asset prices.
The filing’s inclusion of Coinbase, Strategy, and MARA represents a portfolio tilt toward companies whose fortunes are closely linked to Bitcoin and the broader crypto ecosystem. This is notable because these are equity positions, not direct cryptocurrency holdings, a distinction that matters for both regulatory and financial disclosure purposes.
For context, Coinbase also operates Base, an Ethereum Layer 2 network that has become a significant part of the company’s growth strategy. Institutional interest in crypto-adjacent equities has been a recurring theme in 2026, similar to how Dartmouth’s crypto exposure reached $14 million through a Solana ETF position disclosed earlier this year.
The filing itself is the primary source document, and the full scope of crypto-related transactions within it requires detailed review of the PDF. Ethics filings report value ranges (for example, “$1,001 to $15,000”) rather than exact purchase prices or share counts.
Additional ticker-level details, including the specific dates of each transaction and the precise value brackets, should come from direct examination of the OGE document. The broader filing reportedly contained thousands of trades tied to U.S. corporate securities, meaning the crypto-related purchases were part of a much larger portfolio of disclosed transactions.
As regulatory scrutiny of political figures’ financial ties to crypto continues, filings like this one take on added significance. The growing overlap between government policy decisions affecting crypto taxation and personal financial interests in the sector is likely to remain a point of public interest.
Readers tracking how traditional financial disclosure intersects with digital assets, including developments like court-ordered actions involving crypto assets, should note that OGE filings are publicly accessible and represent one of the few windows into officeholders’ financial activities.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.


