President Trump disclosed at least $220m in Q1 2026 securities transactions involving firms including Microsoft, Nvidia and Goldman Sachs, per new Office of Government Ethics filings.Summary:According to filings released by the US Office of Government Ethics:Trump reported at least $220 million in financial transactions during the first three months of 2026, with the total potentially reaching around $750 millionSecurities involved included those linked to Microsoft, Meta Platforms, Oracle, Broadcom, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs, alongside municipal bondsNotable purchases in the $1 million to $5 million range included an S&P 500 index fund, Nvidia and Apple; large sales of $5 million to $25 million included Microsoft, Amazon and MetaThe filings do not specify whether transactions involved stocks or bonds, which accounts they occurred in, or who placed the tradesTrump's assets are held in a trust controlled by his children, with some filings indicating a broker acted as agentA fuller annual financial disclosure covering business assets and income is expected later this yearUS President Donald Trump disclosed at least $220 million in financial transactions during the first quarter of 2026, according to new ethics filings published by the Office of Government Ethics. The documents cover the period from January through March and show trades involving securities tied to some of the largest and most prominent companies in the United States.The filings report transaction values in broad ranges rather than precise figures, placing the cumulative total anywhere between $220 million and approximately $750 million. Among the companies whose securities featured in the disclosures were Microsoft, Meta Platforms, Oracle, Broadcom, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs. Trades in municipal bonds were also recorded.Several individual transactions stood out for their size. Purchases valued at between $1 million and $5 million each included an S&P 500 index fund, Nvidia and Apple. On the sell side, Microsoft, Amazon and Meta each featured in transactions valued at between $5 million and $25 million. The filings do not consistently specify whether the instruments involved were stocks, corporate bonds or other securities.The documents also leave unanswered questions about where the trades were placed and by whom. Trump's financial assets are held within a trust managed by his children, though some entries in the new filings indicate that a broker acted as an agent for certain transactions. The White House press office directed questions to the Trump Organization, which did not immediately respond.Federal ethics rules require the president to disclose transactions above $1,000, but the reporting framework only captures broad value bands and does not include exact prices, realised profits or details of whether assets were acquired directly or through managed accounts. That structure means the filings provide only a partial view of the president's financial activity during any given period.This is not the first time Trump has filed such disclosures since returning to office. He has submitted a series of ethics filings since the start of his second term, consistently showing activity across both corporate securities and municipal debt markets. A more comprehensive annual disclosure covering broader business interests, including golf resorts and cryptocurrency ventures, is expected to follow in the coming months.---The scale of the disclosed transactions, potentially as high as $750 million, adds to scrutiny of financial activity by a sitting president whose policy decisions directly affect the companies named in the filings. Securities in firms such as Nvidia, Microsoft and Goldman Sachs are sensitive to executive trade and tariff policy, and any perception of a conflict of interest could weigh on sentiment around those names. The broad value bands used in the filings leave significant uncertainty about the true size and nature of the positions, which may sustain media and congressional attention in the weeks ahead. This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.