| Those clever Trumps.   No wonder they are rich. 
 
  
 A REUTERS SPECIAL REPORT
 Inside the Trump family’s global crypto cash machine
 
 Eric  Trump, left, Donald Trump Jr., right, and their World Liberty Financial  co-founder Zach Witkoff, behind Don Jr., at the Nasdaq Market in New  York in August to celebrate the closing of a deal under which blockchain  company Alt5 Sigma raised hundreds of millions of dollars to buy World  Liberty Financial tokens, yielding a windfall for the Trump family.  REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
 
 The  U.S. president’s family raked in more than $800 million from sales of  crypto assets in the first half of 2025 alone, a Reuters examination  found, on top of potentially billions more in unrealized “on paper”  gains. Much of that cash has come from foreign sources as Donald Trump's  sons have touted their business on an international investor roadshow.
 
 By  David Gauthier-Villars,   Tom Bergin,   Michelle Conlin,   Lawrence Delevingne and  Tom Wilson
 October 28, 2025 10:00 AM UTC  · Updated  ago
 
 DUBAI  - Eric Trump was in Dubai on family business. Meeting with a Chinese  businessman and his associates on the sidelines of a cryptocurrency  conference in May this year, the son of U.S. President Donald J. Trump  ran through his usual talking points about the inefficiency of  traditional banks and his own famous father’s run-ins with financiers.
 Then  came the pitch. Buy at least $20 million of “governance tokens” in the  Trump family’s crypto business, World Liberty Financial, and become part  of a venture that Eric Trump predicted would soon embody the future of  finance in America, according to a person familiar with the meeting.
 To  some in that small gathering, the technology Eric Trump’s team  described for World Liberty seemed “rudimentary,” the person said. At  the time, World Liberty was a fledgling business. It hadn’t yet created  the cryptocurrency-based finance platform it promised after its  September 2024 launch. It still hasn’t.
 
 Even  so, the pitch apparently worked. On June 26, an obscure entity called  Aqua1 Foundation, which said it was based in the United Arab Emirates,  announced it was buying $100 million of cryptocurrency tokens from World  Liberty. It was the single largest known purchase of the so-called WLFI  tokens at the time.
 The  Chinese businessman who met with Eric Trump in Dubai was Guren “Bobby”  Zhou, who has executive roles in multiple businesses and who is under  investigation in Britain for money laundering, according to that  nation’s National Crime Agency and a document filed in an immigration  case at London's Royal Courts of Justice.
 Zhou  did not respond directly to requests for comment for this article. In a  statement emailed to Reuters, an entity calling itself Aqua Labs  Investment LLC said Zhou was its co-founder and described itself as an  Abu Dhabi entity of Aqua1 Foundation. The statement said Aqua1  Foundation’s investment in World Liberty tokens “was a commercial  decision consistent with its focus on advancing regulated, scalable  digital-asset ecosystems.” Zhou’s relationship to Aqua1 Foundation has  not been previously reported.
 Aqua1 Foundation did not respond to requests for comment. Nor did Eric Trump.
 
 The  Dubai meeting, reported here for the first time, was just one stop on a  globetrotting investment roadshow the two elder sons of President Trump  – Eric and Donald Trump Jr. – embarked on around the time of their  father’s election to a second term. In Europe, the Middle East and Asia,  they have been promoting World Liberty and other ventures that funnel  investors’ cash to Trump family businesses, known collectively as the  Trump Organization.
 
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