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Why Trump-branded investments are collapsing, and what the market is pricing in now 

2 Mins read

In just over two months, Trump-linked stocks and cryptocurrencies have shed more than $1 billion from the Trump family’s net worth.

The development has erased a year’s worth of speculative gains and exposed the fragility of bets anchored to personality rather than fundamentals.

The impact is visible across the spectrum as the $TRUMP meme coin has plummeted roughly 90% from its January peak near $75, while Trump Media shares have crashed 75% since the inauguration.

These are not isolated stumbles, but a broader wholesale repricing of what happens when political capital collides with market volatility.

The mechanics of the momentum trap

It was a familiar story with launch euphoria (celebrity endorsement, retail social-media hype, and enthusiasm for domestic alternatives) attracting hundreds of thousands of small traders into Trump-branded tokens and equities.

The $TRUMP meme coin, released in January, rocketed to a $15 billion market cap in hours, drawing roughly 2 million wallets into the ecosystem.

Trump Media benefited from similar fervor, though as a publicly traded entity, its collapse has been slower and more visible.

They came deep reversals, as cryptocurrencies witnessed weakness in October, triggered partly by Trump’s own tariff announcements.

What followed was record liquidations across leveraged positions.

Bitcoin options implied volatility spiked above 50%, and margin calls cascaded through retail-heavy platforms, forcing algorithmic sell-offs that hit concentrated holdings hardest.

According to Chainalysis, roughly 764,000 of the 2 million wallets that touched $TRUMP have lost money, while only 58 wallets have profited over $10 million each, a bifurcation that signals insider concentration and unequal access to information.

To make things worse for Trump Media, the expiration of insider lockup agreements in September and early December created windows for concentrated seller-initiated outflows.

Meanwhile, the company’s own balance sheet, negative cash flow, no profitable business lines, and a price-to-sales ratio of 679x offered no fundamental anchor.

What market prices are signaling now

Current prices imply investors no longer believe political branding can substitute for revenue or customer adoption.

DJT trades at a depressed 1.4x price-to-book ratio, with institutional ownership collapsed to under 24%, while retail holders who bought at peaks face realized losses running into billions.

On-chain data for $TRUMP shows most recent trading is concentrated among whale accounts repositioning bets rather than fresh retail inflows, a sign speculative fervor has ceded to professional skepticism.

Implied volatility remains elevated, suggesting traders view Trump-linked positions as binary events.

Recovery hinges on macro stabilization, successful business execution at Truth Social, and sustained crypto appetite, none of which are assured.

Near-term, the market is pricing in further downside unless sentiment reverses decisively.

For now, the spell is broken. The Trump brand, for all its talismanic power in retail corners, cannot outrun market physics.

That realization is worth roughly $1 billion to his family, and a cautionary lesson to every trader who believed hype could defy gravity forever.

The post Why Trump-branded investments are collapsing, and what the market is pricing in now  appeared first on Invezz

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