【POLL】85 Trades/Day — What Can Retail Investors Learn From the Trump's Rhythm?
【NEWS EVENT】
The U.S. Office of Government Ethics (OGE) just disclosed that President Donald Trump executed over 21,000 securities trades in 2025, with a total value between $600 million and $1.86 billion. Trump's team claims these assets are independently managed by third-party institutions through "automated, model-based portfolios," placing them in a so-called "blind trust."
Trump averaged 85 trades per market day in 2025, with a net purchase of approximately 300million in U.S. stocks for the full year. His holdings are heavily concentrated inTechnology( $NVIDIA(NVDA)$ , $Microsoft(MSFT)$ , $Apple(AAPL)$ , $Advanced Micro Devices(AMD)$ , $Intel(INTC)$ ) and Financials ( $Goldman Sachs(GS)$ ), operating across 8 separate accounts simultaneously.
OGE filings also show that on January 6, 2025, Trump purchased up to 1 millionin $NVIDIA(NVDA)$ stock. One week later, his administration loosened chip export controls to China. $NVDA surged. On that same day, he also bought $1M–5 Meachin $Microsoft(MSFT)$ , $Broadcom(AVGO)$ , and other tech names.
【THINKING 1】 Setting aside the ethics debate, the data itself is highly educational:
-
1️⃣ Concentration beats Diversification: Over 70% of his portfolio is in Tech + Financials — a clear bet on the AI cycle and the financial sector's trajectory.
-
2️⃣ Buying Into Volatility: 25% of all trades were clustered into just 10 days — all during periods of heightened market volatility. This suggests he treats policy uncertainty as a buying opportunity.
-
3️⃣ Net Buyer Mindset: With ~$300M in net U.S. stock purchases for the year, he's accumulating — not panic-selling.
-
4️⃣ Multi-Account Strategy: 8 accounts could indicate tax-loss harvesting, risk isolation, or rebalancing across custodians.
Which of these strategies are YOU already using? Which ones do you think are worth borrowing?
【THINKING 2】 If the person who knows policy direction better than anyone is putting 70%+ of his money into AI and Financials, that's a powerful signal in itself.
H2 2026 Outlook: → The AI infrastructure investment cycle is far from over (data centers, CPO, memory chips) → The Fed's policy path remains uncertain, and financials stand to benefit from the rate environment → But concentration risk is real — a single-sector pullback could devastate the portfolio
The question is: When "policy alpha" and "valuation bubble" exist at the same time, which side do you choose?
【POLL 1】 For H2 2026, will you follow Trump's sector allocation?
🔘 A. Yes — AI + Financials is still the main theme. I'm going heavy.
🔘 B. I'll reference it but reduce concentration and add defensive positions.
🔘 C. No — his informational edge is something I can't replicate.
🔘 D. I only buy indices. No individual stock bets. 🎯
Cast your vote 👇
Pick one or two and tell us why 👇
Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

One strategy I already use is buying into volatility. When quality companies correct without a major change in fundamentals, I see it as an opportunity to average up or DCA into my highest-conviction positions. Volatility often creates attractive entry points for long-term investors.
In the end, I don't invest based on who is buying. I focus on business quality, earnings growth, valuation, and long-term trends. Trump's allocation is an interesting signal, but I still rely on a disciplined investment process that I can stick with in any market.
@TigerStars @TigerClub @Tiger_comments