The Oakland Press

Trump’s social media company to start trading on the Nasdaq today

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Trump Media & Technology Group, whose flagship product is social networking site Truth Social, will begin trading on the Nasdaq stock market on Tuesday.

Shareholde­rs of Digital World Acquisitio­n Corp., a publicly traded shell company, approved a deal to merge with the Trump’s media business in a Friday vote.

Shares of Digital World have been volatile. On Friday the stock slumped 13.7% after the merger was approved. On Monday, it soared 35.2% to $49.95.

Former President Donald Trump is set to own most of the combined company — or nearly 79 million shares, with a value of nearly $4 billion.

Trump won’t be able to cash out his stake in the Palm Beach, Florida-based company immediatel­y, unless the company’s board makes changes to a “lock-up” provision that prevents company insiders from selling newly issued shares for six months.

The former president was in New York Monday attending a hearing on his criminal hush money case.

Elsewhere, a New York appeals court reduced to $175 million what he must post in cash or a bond while appealing a $454 million civil fraud ruling.

Truth Social launched in February 2022, one year after Trump was banned from major social platforms including Facebook and X, formerly Twitter, following the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol.

He’s since been reinstated to both but has stuck with Truth Social. Trump has promoted Truth Social on the platform itself — on Friday he posted “I love Truth

Social.”

Trump Media hasn’t so far disclosed Truth Social’s user numbers but now that the company is publicly traded, more informatio­n will be disclosed. Research firm Similarweb estimates that it had roughly 5 million active mobile and web users in February.

That’s far below TikTok’s more than 2 billion and Facebook’s 3 billion — but still higher than other “alt-tech” rivals like Parler, which has been offline for nearly a year but is planning a comeback, or Gettr, which had less than 2 million visitors in February.

Trump Media lost $49 million in the first nine months of last year, when it brought in just $3.4 million in revenue and had to pay $37.7 million in interest expenses.

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