The Guardian (USA)

Trump could net $3bn after investors approve Truth Social to go public

- Callum Jones in San Francisco

Investors approvedpl­ans to take Donald Trump’s social media platform public on Friday, netting the former president a paper fortune of $3bn.

Trump Media & Technology, the firm behind his minnow social network Truth Social, has spent years fighting to land on the stock market via a so-called “blank check” merger with a shell company.

It finally succeededo­n Friday morning, following a vote of shareholde­rs in Digital World Acquisitio­n, the vehicle with which Trump’s business has sought to combine.

While Trump Media has struggled since Truth Social’s lackluster launch, generating sales of only about $5m since 2021, Trump’s supporters banded together to boost shares in Digital World. The stock has rallied by some 145% since the turn of the year, boosting the firm’s value to about $6bn.

The company will now trade on the stock market as Trump Media & Technology Group under the stock ticker “DJT” – Trump’s initials.

Ahead of the announceme­nt, Digital World’s stock price was $44, suggesting the new company will debut with a value of more than $5bn. Trump’s holding in the combined business is listed at 79m shares, leaving him with a stake of about $3bn on paper. He will not be able to cash in this stake straight away, however, as key shareholde­rs in the company are unable to sell stock for six months after the merger.

Trading in Digital World has been particular­ly volatile – and its shares sank by nearly 14% after Friday’s vote – raising questions about how Trump Media will fare on the stock market before Trump can sell any of his stake.

It comes amid a financial crunch for Trump, who is vying to regain the presidency from Joe Biden in November’s elections. He was ordered by a New York judge last month to pay $454m following a civil fraud case, something his lawyers warned this week was a “practical impossibil­ity” after 30 surety companies turned him down. The deadline is Monday.

Digital World has increasing­ly been seen as a so-called meme stock, boosted by internet memes – posted, in its case, on platforms including Truth Social – urging retail investors to buy into it.

The shell company first announced plans to combine with Trump’s digital media firm in 2021, but has grappled with a series of legal hurdles.

Special purpose acquisitio­n companies, or Spacs, such as Digital World raise money from investors through initial public offerings, before typically searching for a company to take public.

Once a Spac finds and agrees terms with a target, it absorbs the business and draws it on to the stock market, enabling investors in both companies to take a slide. Should the Spac’s original investors not like the deal, however, they can withdraw their cash.

Julian Klymochko, founder and CEO of a Spac-focused fund at Accelerate Financial Technologi­es, said Digital World’s price rise was “not due to the underlying fundamenta­ls”.

Truth Social “hasn’t really taken off”, Klymochko said. “At this point, it’s a meme stock. It’s really just a betting tool on the probabilit­y of Trump winning the election.”

Shares of Digital World soared 88% on 22 January, he noted, when Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida, dropped out of the Republican presidenti­al candidate race.

 ?? Photograph: John Minchillo/AP ?? Donald Trump’s Truth Social account.
Photograph: John Minchillo/AP Donald Trump’s Truth Social account.

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