Spotlight on Stock Trades: Did Trump Officials Profit From Advance Tariff Knowledge?
By USA TODAY reporting and analysis; updated with recent data
The intersection of politics and finance has always drawn intense scrutiny, but the shockwaves from President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff announcements in early 2025 have brought that tension to the front pages once more. A recent USA TODAY investigation found that multiple high-ranking Trump officials divested millions in stocks just days before the White House made public major trade moves that sent global markets into turmoil. The tight clustering of these trades is raising questions about what exactly these officials knew—and when.
This report, echoing similar scrutiny faced by lawmakers during the COVID-19 pandemic, brings renewed urgency to ongoing debates about the adequacy and enforcement of government ethics laws meant to prevent abuse of insider information.
Clustered Sales Ahead of Tariff Shocks
According to federal financial disclosures reviewed by USA TODAY, approximately 90% of stock and stock fund sales by 20 top Trump administration appointees occurred within 10 days of either the February 13 or April 2, 2025, tariff announcements. Notable among the sellers were Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and Deputy Attorney General Pam Bondi, along with White House Deputy Chief of Staff Dan Scavino. Some transactions involved high-value trades — as much as $5 million in Trump Media stock by Scavino — while others represented required divestments for ongoing government service.
These clusters suggest a possible awareness of market-moving events before they became public, especially since the biggest sell-off occurred just ahead of President Trump’s April 2 proclamation, which sharply escalated the extent and impact of U.S. tariffs on major trading partners. The stock market responded violently: the S&P 500 plunged 12% and nearly $10 trillion in market capitalization vanished in days before rebounding after an April 9 pause on the tariffs. As of July 21, the market had recovered somewhat, posting a year-to-date gain of 7.5% for the S&P 500.
Ethics Rules, Divestment Obligations, and Responses
Spokespeople for several of the officials insisted that the timing of the trades was driven by compliance with federal ethics agreements rather than anticipation of tariff news. For instance, the Department of the Interior stressed that Doug Burgum’s trades were “ethically fully compliant” and necessary for him to serve, while the Department of Justice said Bondi’s sizable divestment had been a subject of ongoing consultation with ethics officers.
Federal officials holding roles confirmed by the Senate must adhere to the 2012 STOCK Act, which demands timely and public reporting of stock trades. They must also comply with the provisions of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, including divesting from holdings related to their official duties within 90 days of confirmation. However, for certain White House staffers who are not Senate-confirmed, these obligations are less explicit, though financial disclosures remain mandatory.
USA TODAY’s review found no direct evidence of trades based on nonpublic information. Still, watchdogs emphasize that the mere appearance of impropriety can be corrosive to public trust.
Calls for Investigation and Political Fallout
The suspicious timing was flagged by Representative Jamie Raskin (D-MD), who called for a Justice Department inquiry, noting the pattern echoed high-profile cases from 2020, when several senators faced probes for major financial moves just before the COVID-19 crash. Government accountability groups like the Project on Government Oversight and State Democracy Defenders Action have consistently advocated making such official trading subject to stronger scrutiny and stricter rules.
Virginia Canter, a former White House counsel and chief ethics officer with experience under both Democratic and Republican administrations, emphasized that “even if no laws are broken, officials should avoid even the appearance of using privileged information to their advantage.” She advocated for detailed interviews and, if warranted, full-scale investigations to determine whether the trades were simply a matter of unfortunate optics or a sign of systematic insider activity.
Pattern or Coincidence? Parsing the Data
The USA TODAY analysis covered 250 securities sales totaling as much as $13 million during the first months of 2025. Strikingly, more than 60% of the reported transactions were packed into the final 10 days before Liberation Day on April 2. Other, smaller flurries of sales coincided with the runup to the February 13 announcement. Advocates point out that this concentration is “hard to ignore,” but admit proving insider trading in court remains challenging—relying as it does on demonstrating that trades were made based on genuinely nonpublic information rather than coincidence or external advice.
Complicating matters, some sales fell outside the relevant windows, and not all top officials sold stocks; some, like Education Secretary Linda McMahon, disposed of other assets such as bonds. White House Counsel David Warrington, who sold shares in companies such as NVIDIA, Amazon, and Berkshire Hathaway on March 25, insisted his trades were unremarkable and fully compliant.
Update: Regulatory and Legislative Response
This episode has added fuel to bipartisan efforts to toughen ethics laws around elected and appointed federal employees’ financial transactions. Several bills before Congress would ban trading in individual stocks by top federal officials altogether, echoing regulatory reforms Europe and Asia already enacted. Meanwhile, public transparency tools — like online trackers and improved real-time reporting systems — are gaining popularity with investors and policy-watchers alike.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Justice Department both retain authority to investigate trading activity that may violate existing regulations. To date, no charges related to these 2025 trades have been filed. Ethics experts, however, continue to call for independent reviews whenever trades and official market-moving announcements appear so closely entwined.
Public Trust and the Future of Market Integrity
At a time of heightened political polarization, episodes like these underline the critical need for robust, enforceable, and clearly communicated ethics requirements in government. As new global risks and White House decisions ripple through markets, the challenge of drawing bright lines between legitimate divestment, prudent financial planning, and unethical profiteering only grows more daunting.
For now, the clustered stock trades of top Trump administration officials remain under the microscope, a stark reminder that in the capital markets — as in government — perception can weigh almost as heavily as proof.

