The Daily - The Newest Tech Start-Up Billionaire? Donald Trump
Episode Date: March 28, 2024Over the past few years, Donald Trump’s social media platform, Truth Social, has been dismissed as a money-losing boondoggle.This week, that all changed. Matthew Goldstein, a New York Times business... reporter, explains how its parent venture, Truth Media, became a publicly traded company worth billions of dollars.Guest: Matthew Goldstein, a New York Times business reporter.Background reading: What to know about Trump Media’s high-flying stock debut.Ethics experts say the publicly traded company could present a new way for foreign actors or others to influence Mr. Trump, if he is elected president.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.Â
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Over the past few years, Donald Trump's social media company, Truth Social, was dismissed
as a money-losing boondoggle.
money-losing boondoggle.
Today, Matthew Goldstein on how, over the past few days,
it somehow became a publicly traded company worth billions of dollars.
It's Thursday, March 28th. Because my mother likes me using. When I first started out, my mom says, I named you Matthew.
You should use Matthew for your bio.
Because I initially did use Matt.
And then she caught it.
This is literally the tale of the Jewish mother.
Yes, yes.
The way all journalism sort of starts.
You know, why did you go into journalism to begin with?
Right.
You could have been a doctor.
Here we are.
At least use my name.
Okay.
So, Matt, I wonder if we could start by having you tell us the current market value of this new publicly traded company, Donald Trump's social media business.
Okay.
So, as we sit here.
11.26 a.m. on Wednesday.
On Wednesday.
It's trading right now for around $65 a share. Mm-hmm.
If you work that out, it's worth about $8 billion.
That's huge.
That is huge.
I think it's bigger than the New York Times, actually.
I think the New York Times is like around $7 billion.
It's bigger than a lot of companies, you know, which is crazy when you think about it.
Yeah.
And what is Donald Trump's personal stake in that?
And what is that now worth?
So he owns 79 million shares. So roughly doing the math, and this changes, it's somewhere around
$5.6 billion. It's been going up sometimes as high as even $6 billion.
That's extraordinary.
That is extraordinary because if you believe what Forbes had said last fall,
because if you believe what Forbes had said last fall,
he was worth about $2.6 billion.
So he's more than doubled his net worth in basically a last few days with Trump media.
Wow. And not a moment too soon, right?
Because as we've talked about on the show,
Trump owes about every last cent of cash he has,
I think it's an estimated 500 million or so to various
courts. And this would be very auspicious timing to suddenly have an extra $5 billion in his life.
It's a critical lifeline for him right now. There, of course, are limitations to how
he can tap that money. But I think also it should not be understated.
It's a huge bragging point for him, which he likes to go out and talk about being the most
successful businessman on the planet. He can say, look, I built a company that's worth $7 billion
overnight. Where have you done that, Joe Biden? Or where have you done that pretty much almost
anyone other than a very select, rarefied group of tech startups?
Absolutely.
So tell us the story of how this company, which I think a lot of people candidly dismissed from the beginning as Trump's little kind of renegade corner of the internet, somehow became this, a real financial behemoth in a way.
What is that story?
So you have to go back to January 2021.
Trump is kicked off of what was then Twitter
after the January 6th riots at the Capitol.
And not just Twitter, right?
Facebook, Instagram.
Yeah, he was kicked off everything.
But Twitter was really where he had lived, as we all knew. Right. Tens of millions of followers. Tens of millions.
So Trump is at this low point. He's out of the White House. He's sort of down there in Mar-a-Lago.
And all of a sudden, a blast from the past.
He gets approached by these two guys who had been contestants on his old reality show,
The Apprentice.
And their names are Andy Latinsky and Wes Moss.
I'm no dummy.
No, I know.
You know.
They're not particularly notable or famous people.
I don't know if the word is stars on the show.
To be perfectly honest, I want to see Mr.
Trump as much as possible. Lutensky was a really young guy. I chose to the men dominating the
women. Wes Moss came out sort of as like almost like a frat boy type of character. Wes, you're fired also.
And they weren't particularly successful, but they go to Trump.
And what exactly is their pitch to him?
Their pitch is basically, forget about Twitter.
Forget about all these other platforms.
Create your own platform.
Create your own social media company.
It'll be great.
You won't be censored.
You can say whatever you want. All your own social media company. It'll be great. You won't be censored. You can
say whatever you want. All your followers will come here. We'll make a lot of money. We'll be
huge. What was Trump's response? Well, he's intrigued, but he never really totally commits
to anything. At that point, Trump is sort of taking a backseat on it. He's basically
agreeing to lend his name, if nothing else.
They sign an agreement that they're going to go out and sort of pitch the deal.
And the apprentice guys know that they're going to need a lot of money to get this company off the ground.
But they're not going to be able to turn to traditional Wall Street sources because Trump
at this point is kind of toxic.
Yeah, he's a toxic guy. So the solution for the apprentice guys to raise this money was to do
something called a SPAC, which is these companies that have come into vogue during the pandemic.
They're basically shell companies that go public, raise hundreds of million dollars from investors,
That go public, raise hundreds of million dollars from investors, and essentially their sole purpose is to go out and look for another company to buy.
It's basically money in a bank account that's just sitting there to be transferred over to the private company that you buy.
So for the private company that ends up merging, it's a great deal because they get tons of cash where they had nothing the day before. And the other advantage of a deal with the SPAC is that beyond the cash,
the private company becomes a public company, and that gives it the ability to sell stock
to investors and go out and raise more money that way. And then through that merger, eventually the
two companies coming together, the company that Trump is going to be ostensibly heading, that social media company, would get everything the SPAC had raised from investors.
So all that cash is going to come flooding into the company the Apprentice guys envision.
envision. So if I'm understanding his plan correctly, the apprentice guys envision a plan where they go off, they find a SPAC that has raised a bunch of money, and eventually it will
merge with the Trump social media company they envision building. And when that marriage is
consummated, their work will be over and they will hopefully have a lot of money.
Basically, that's exactly what their goal was.
Yeah.
So the apprentice guys are out there in the market looking for a SPAC.
But given the lack of really any kind of business plan, they don't go to like the top flight
guys out there.
They end up at the bottom of the barrel.
Okay.
And so they end up with essentially a very no-name-sounding SPAC called Digital World Acquisition Corporation.
Digital World has its IPO in September of 2021, raises $300 million.
Lo and behold, like a month after a press release comes out late at night, Donald Trump
and Trump Media are merging with Digital World Acquisition Corp.
I remember people pinging me, is this a joke? Because most people, I'm sure, had never heard
of Digital World. And even more people had no idea that Trump was even doing a social media company.
Because while all this is going on and they're trying to put a deal together,
the social media platform that will become Truth Social hasn't even launched and it won't do so for months later.
But there's trouble right away.
came together, looking into whether digital world violated securities laws by engaging in merger talks ahead of time, which technically isn't kosher in the way SPACs are supposed
to work.
But this investigation just drags on and on and on, and it's going to delay everything.
So this is turning out to be a pretty big mess.
Very big mess.
It looks like this deal's never going to happen.
And finally, when they launched Truth Social in early 2022, it's a little bit of a joke.
It's like this sort of very early version of Twitter when it's sort of clunky.
How clunky? You were on it?
Yeah, I actually think I was one of the
first people to get in,
which I thought was sort of funny because I said
I was from the New York Times. They actually
verified me. Mazel tov.
There was very little traffic. It was almost like
you'd post something and
you could literally hear the quickness.
Trump
never posted for three months.
Trump never posted on Truth Social, the site that exists for his.
And I remember writing a story and you couldn't get an answer from them.
Why is he not posting?
Perhaps because he has his own doubts.
And also it wasn't a place, no one was there.
I mean, they had a few million users.
There's like a few million dollars in advertising on Truth Social.
A lot of them, the equivalent of almost-night TV advertising that you would see. It's losing tons of money,
which is, in fairness, it's not unusual for a startup company to lose money. But it was not
clear where it was ever going to make money and where the money was going to come in.
And we're looking at this thing, is it even going to happen?
Your deal is in trouble because of regulators,
and also the company's in trouble because there's just nothing there.
So everyone, I think for the most part, sort of counts this thing out.
For them, it was a desperate situation.
For them, it was a desperate situation. Mm-hmm.
And then last summer, a bunch of things started to go right all of a sudden for Trump media.
And it really started to raise the prospects that this deal actually could happen.
We'll be right back.
So, but how is it that things start to turn around for this real mess of a social media company that Donald Trump has founded.
Okay.
So the single biggest thing was last summer, the SEC settles its investigation with Digital World, with the SPAC that it was merging with.
And that basically at that point sort of clears the gates for them to start to really move
forward with the merger.
What kind of settlement was it?
They had to pay $18 million, and they had to rewrite all their disclosures to make it
consistent to reveal all the early talks they had had with Trump media.
Got it.
The other thing is, Elon Musk buys Twitter, now X, and one of the first things he does
is he says, Trump, you can come back. Start
posting again. We want you. We love you. Everyone thinks Trump's going to do that, but then he stays.
He continues to post on Truth Social, and it's clear he's sticking with his own platform.
And if anything, he starts ramping up his postings on Truth Social.
And if anything, he starts ramping up his postings on Truth Social.
And they become increasingly, as we know with the way Trump is, bombastic, inflammatory,
attacking all the judges and all the cases going on, the prosecutors, political opponents.
And he's been doing it with increasing frequency.
And this is a key ingredient of last summer's turnaround.
Because it's clear at this point Trump is sticking with true social.
He's not going anywhere.
He's leaning into it and it's become his platform.
But we shouldn't lose sight that maybe the most important thing is the loyalty of shareholders. And I'm not talking about big hedge funds,
big institutions, wealthy people. I'm talking about ordinary Trump supporters, many of them
who are posters on Truth Social and happen to be stockholders of this cash-rich SPAC that's
eventually going to merge with Trump media. And they're the ones who have kept this thing going
to some degree.
As investors.
As investors.
Because there were many points
where the SPAC deal itself could have just failed.
But they really want to make sure this company succeeds.
It's almost like a religious kind of thing
for some of them.
And I can tell you one guy's been very vocal
as actually sort of a Christian minister.
Good evening, D-Wax stock.
He has his own streaming video show on Rumble,
which he called D-Waxed Live, named after the shares.
Lord, we ask in the name of Jesus
that you help the executives finish this strong
and that you protect them from all the forces
that would try to stop the merger.
And in their personal-
Where they talk about the stock and the merger and it's got his own following.
Just all show up at Mar-a-Lago, knock on the door and be like,
hey, President Trump, we'd like to come party with you because
we all own little bits of your company and we love you.
Let's just check on the price one more time before we head out for the night.
So in some way, Trump really owes a lot
to his small shareholders who made this possible. Because if it wasn't for them,
there would be no merger. And when they talk to you about why they have bought shares in this
business, in this SPAC, even when it's at its least successful and most imperiled,
how do they talk about why it's worth their hard-earned money?
First of all, they view they're building something. And they've all believed that,
right or wrong, whatever you may think about it, that Truth Social is free from censorship,
that allows Trump and others to say what they want. And they really believe that
as the founding principles, they're the original owners essentially going to be of this company,
and they're helping it flourish and build. So this has become a real personal thing for a lot of them,
more so than I think I've ever seen with any other publicly traded company before.
So the folks who are investing in this SPAC, anticipating it will eventually get together with Truth Social, and who, as you have just said, sustain this through its darkest chapter, they aren't really there because they see this as a highly profitable business. You just said, Matt, that it was losing money.
They're doing it as a statement
and I guess a measure of their fervor for Trump,
for the movement he represents.
Buying the stock is a way for them
to put their money where their mouth is
when it comes to MAGA.
Right, right.
For them, this is about supporting Trump and supporting this company, which they view as
critically important in keeping its message out there alive.
So Matt, I think that more or less brings us to this week, right?
When this turnaround you're describing results in this crazy takeoff of the stock price.
But just walk us through the mechanics of it.
What happened was there's the shareholder vote.
And the way it works is digital world shareholders
have to vote to approve the merger with Trump Media.
It was at this point, it was a foregone conclusion,
but it's a vote, so you never know what's going to happen.
And they get the vote on Friday.
It's overwhelming.
I think it was 29 million shares voted in favor and 200,000 voted against.
I mean, you just don't see that.
A landslide.
A landslide, yes.
Like an electoral landslide.
So the deal goes through.
On Monday, the deal is actually closed.
And we have our first day of trading on Tuesday of this week.
Ticker symbol DJT.
Donald Donald J. Trump.
Former President Donald Trump's newly merged social media company has begun trading and shares are soaring.
It opens for trading at around 40 something dollars a share.
More than 6.5 million shares in Trump media
had changed hands by 9.50 this morning.
They have to actually halt trading briefly
because the volume, the level of trading,
is off the charts in the stock.
And currently, you take a look at where shares are.
They're up about 40%.
At one point, it reaches $70 a share.
This is the highest profile SPAC we've reaches $70 a share.
And on the end of trading on Tuesday, it closes around $60 or so. And that's how we get this $7, $8 billion valuation for the company and the paper gain of $5.6 billion.
For Trump.
For Trump.
Paper gain of $5.6 billion.
For Trump.
For Trump.
But for now, quote unquote, DJT is the mother of all meme stocks. With the stock up 32%, up as much as 58% today, hard to disagree.
I just want to make sure I understand why this company is now valued so highly.
And I guess what I'm really getting at is, is there an actual business case for it,
getting at is, is there an actual business case for it, given what folks in your calling would describe as the fundamentals of the business? Or is this just a measure of these
Trump-supporting investors' deep affinity for him? Is this basically a bubble or is there maybe a true financial justification that can be laid out here?
Okay.
So if we go pure fundamentals, it's crazy.
This company is not a $7 or $8 billion company.
It had $3.3 million in revenues for the first nine months of last year.
It lost about $49 million.
Yeah, that is not the makings of an $8 billion valuation company.
No, no, no.
I mean, the one good thing it got going, it got $300 million in cash from this merger,
not for Trump, for the company.
So that's good.
They can use that cash to go out and buy something, bring in more people, hire influencers on
Truth Social.
But even then, they have 10 million downloads
of Truth Social. I mean, Twitter is what, like hundreds of millions of users? I'm sorry,
X has a hundred millions of users. Where's it going to go for that kind of growth to justify
that? But this is what Wall Street is. I mean, you know, we call them our meme stocks. They're fantasy stocks. They
take on a life of their own. We had this during the pandemic with GameStop and AMC. The shares
run up to ridiculous levels, driven largely by retail investors.
Right. And just to remind people, those were stocks where retail investors were buying shares,
it felt like, because they wanted to send a message,
largely anti-establishment message,
they were mad at a hedge fund that had shorted it.
In one case, I remember they wanted to make a point.
They wanted to stick it to the man.
Right. And also, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
It becomes a mania.
Then others sort of see this and get in
because you feel like if you keep buying,
it's never going to fall.
It's never going to go down.
And that can work for a while, but eventually gravity will always take hold at some part.
I'm not saying that Trump media is going to collapse, but at some point, something will happen that will trigger the stock to sell off.
Right.
It's fragile. It's fragile.
It's fragile, right.
It's not sustainable at this level. But when it's happening, it's hard for me or anyone to give you a rational reason.
And that's why there's this old thing, a rational exuberance.
It's not necessarily unusual.
It's just that it's unusual because you have a very loyal investor base to the reality that he is the now lead
candidate in the polls for re-election. But I'm curious what investors think about that,
how they link his chances of becoming president with the financial health and future promise of
this company. It's definitely, I think, going to be a barometer, sort of Trump
and his political fortunes. I mean, just by way of example, the SPAC stock started to soar this year
when Trump was on the verge of locking up the nomination. It was around the time DeSantis
dropped out in New Hampshire. The stock surged like 60, 70 percent overnight. It was really because people were like, hey, Trump is going to be the nominee and we're going to be going forward.
But can you just explain that?
What does one have to do with the other?
In theory, it doesn't have anything to do with it, but it's like a proxy for him.
It's also the idea that as long as Trump is still politically viable, Trump media is viable.
Truth Social is viable.
And presumably a president 2.0 Trump is the best possible situation for this stock price.
If he wins, I think it probably will be a high watermark for the stock.
And I would just think given the dynamic with the election right now, it's hard to see the stock not continuing to rise,
at least until November. Okay, I want to turn now to Trump's access to this very valuable stock
at a time when, as we all know, he seems to need money. How and when could he tap into this money?
Okay, so at the moment, he actually can't.
Can't.
He can't.
There's what's called a lockup, a restriction.
It's not just for him.
It's for any major shareholders.
They can't sell for six months.
It's actually not unusual in these kind of circumstances.
The logic is you don't want important people to the company, important shareholders to
bolt as soon as
the deal goes through.
But there are other ways he can get around that.
One way is for the board.
It's a seven-member board.
They're all loyalists for the most part.
They could allow him to sell shares early.
I personally think that's unlikely because it shows a lack of faith.
You know, just like if he had jumped from Trude Social onto Twitter, this would be the same kind of message being sent.
Got it.
What they could do is allow him to pledge those shares, meaning he can go out and get a loan, use it as collateral.
The shares don't get sold, but you're giving them to some other like a bank or probably more likely a hedge fund.
giving them to some other like a bank or probably more likely a hedge fund.
So that would be a way for him to monetize his stock without actually selling it.
So if Trump really wanted to, he could find a way working through this board of loyalists to tap into this money pretty quickly if he so chose to.
If he asked the board to do it, I think there's probably a good chance the board would do it.
But if he doesn't really need the money that desperately, I think he probably won't.
And I think the board would be reluctant because it doesn't really help anyone to have lots of stock coming out into the market.
That only will probably depress the price of the share.
the price of the share.
And it doesn't help to have the face of the company, the man whose initials are on the ticker, selling the stock because that suggests he doesn't have a tremendous amount of faith
in the business.
And that might trigger a sell-off, which would undermine the value of the rest of his stock.
It's a pretty bad cycle to start.
It's a bad, right.
That's like the event that starts to send the sell-off.
And even at that point, even your most loyal shareholders may say, well,
I don't want to be left the last one holding the bag.
Right. I want to step way back for just a minute and think about the larger meaning of
what has happened with Truth Social. I mean, I've covered a lot of Trump's businesses through the
years, investigated them when he was a candidate in 2016. And it really strikes me that
of all the businesses he's been in,
real estate, casinos, Trump University,
selling Trump steaks, Trump wine, whatever,
you know, those made money.
This in some ways feels like
the least sound business of all.
And yet it has made him the richest by far.
That's a little bit weird to wrap your head around.
What does that tell you about the nature of Trump
and these investors who believe in this?
It is weird.
I'm not a politics reporter,
but from a business perspective,
this has given me a little
bit better insight into his seemingly unending kind of popularity and support. There's the old
adage on Wall Street, never fall in love with the stock. But the reality is a lot of his shareholders
here are in love with the stock. They have fallen in love with it,
and they're in love with him to a large extent. And when you have that sort of mix there,
it allows a stock to soar to sort of unreal levels that we're seeing now.
And who knows where it goes from here? But for the moment, it's clearly working for Mr. Trump.
Well, Matt, thank you very much.
Thank you for having me.
When the stock market closed on Wednesday afternoon, shares of Trump's new media company reached $66 a share, up 14% from the previous day.
As of this morning, the company is worth $9.4 billion.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
back. Here's what else you need to know today. Authorities said that the six missing workers who were on the Francis Scott Key Bridge when it collapsed are now presumed dead. The workers
were members of a construction crew who were repairing masonry and potholes when a massive
container ship plowed into the bridge on Tuesday morning. This is no ordinary bridge.
This is one of the cathedrals of American infrastructure.
Experts say that rebuilding the bridge, which carried 30,000 vehicles a day,
will probably take years and cost hundreds of millions of dollars,
a reality acknowledged by the Secretary of Transportation, Pete Buttigieg.
So the path to normalcy will not be easy.
It will not be quick.
It will not be inexpensive.
But we will rebuild together.
And the first-ever congestion pricing system in the United States
crossed a major milestone on Wednesday
when New York officially approved tolls for cars driving through the busiest sections of Manhattan.
The system, modeled on those in London and Singapore,
is designed to significantly reduce traffic and air pollution.
The tolls, $15 for most passenger cars
and as much as $36 for large trucks,
are expected to raise $1 billion a year for mass transportation.
The new system could still be blocked
by several lawsuits seeking to derail it,
but if those cases fail, the tolls will begin in mid-June.
Today's episode was produced by Will Reed, Mary Wilson, and Asta Chaturvedi.
It was edited by Lexi Diao, contains original music by Marion Lozano and Dan Powell,
and was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderland.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bilboro.
See you tomorrow.