The latest disclosed documents reveal that President Trump reported thousands of financial trades in the first three months of 2026, involving several hundred million dollars, including a significant amount of buying and selling in tech giants like Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta.

Trump submitted documents to the U.S. Office of Government Ethics showing over 3,700 trades, with each trade's total amount listed as a range rather than an exact figure.

Reportedly, these trades were made public on Thursday, with a cumulative valuation between $220 million and $750 million. The documents indicate that Trump's largest buys and sells were heavily focused on the tech sector.

The documents reveal that in 36 trades valued between $1 million and $5 million in the first quarter of 2026, Trump bought securities from companies like ServiceNow, Nvidia, Adobe, Microsoft, Oracle, Broadcom, Motorola, Amazon, Texas Instruments, and Dell.

Trump's four largest sell-offs in that quarter were also primarily in tech stocks: the documents show he sold between $5 million to $25 million worth of Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta securities on February 10. Dozens of other trades also took place that same day.

The timing of some of Trump's trades coincides with company news releases regarding the stocks he was buying and selling.

For instance, a week after Trump bought between $1 million to $5 million worth of Nvidia stock on February 10, Nvidia announced a major chip deal with Meta.

The documents don't clarify whether Trump directly instructed those trades. Some of these trades are described in the documents as 'unsolicited,' but the meaning of that term isn't clear.

White House spokesperson Davis Engel stated in a release that the president's assets are held in a trust managed by his children.

Engel stated in the release: 'There is no conflict of interest. Every action taken by President Trump is in the best interest of the American public — which is why, despite the fake news media's lies and false accusations against him and his businesses over the years, the American people overwhelmingly re-elected him to this position.'

U.S. law doesn't prohibit the president from holding or trading stocks while in office, but they must report their trades as required.

Trump's annual financial disclosures are expected to be published later this year.

The latest disclosed documents only require Trump to report securities trades exceeding $1,000. The documents also explicitly state that the filer does not need to close certain financial assets, such as mutual funds or other investment funds, U.S. Treasury bonds, and real estate.