Forbes Daily: Trump’s Bitcoin Renaissance

During his first term in office, President Donald Trump wanted little to do with cryptocurrency, tweeting in 2019 that crypto’s value was “based on thin air.”

Less than a decade later, Trump is now one of the largest bitcoin investors on the planet, with an estimated $870 million in the digital currency. Only a handful of other billionaires appear to own more, analysis by Forbes’ Dan Alexander shows.

As the second Trump presidency has lifted digital asset values across the industry, the president’s transformation from crypto skeptic to bitcoin bull gives investors a powerful ally in the White House—especially if prices continue to climb and add to Trump’s fortune.

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FIRST UP

Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post via Getty Images

U.S. stock futures rose early on Monday as President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance signaled they are open to a deal with China to de-escalate trade tensions. Trump on Friday had threatened to impose 100% tariffs on China in response to broader trade restrictions on rare earth minerals.

The Trump Administration moved to terminate thousands of federal worker positions Friday as part of a mass reduction in force tied to the government shutdown, a move that the largest federal employee union says is unauthorized. Treasury, Health and Human Services and Homeland Security were among the departments impacted, though the administration on Saturday had already rehired CDC officials who it said were laid off in error, according to the New York Times.

BUSINESS + FINANCE

Americans still aren’t feeling optimistic about the U.S. economy, with consumer sentiment decreasing in October, marking the third straight month of decline, a new survey from the University of Michigan found. Issues like rising prices and weakening job prospects “remain at the forefront of consumers’ minds,” with more Americans feeling pessimistic about their future finances, says the survey’s director Joanne Hsu.

WEALTH + ENTREPRENEURSHIP

Gwen Graves (left), Pete Nelson, Todd Graves (right)

COURTESY TODD GRAVES

Raising Cane’s founder Todd Graves has built a $22 billion chicken finger empire with one of America’s hottest fast-food chains. And the business’ meteoric growth has allowed Graves to build a fantastical childhood dream: a $400,000, three-level treehouse in the backyard of his Baton Rouge estate. But the impressive structure isn’t all whimsy: “I can come out here and I can think, clear my head,” says the 53-year-old billionaire.

After founding what would later become the Virgin Group at just 19 years old, Sir Richard Branson today oversees 40 Virgin companies that operate in 35 countries and employ more than 60,000 people. In a recent interview with Forbes’ Martina Di Licosa, the 75-year-old billionaire discussed his earliest investments: “The sheer possibility of earning my own money was really exciting.”

MONEY + POLITICS

Despite sacrificing a financially lucrative career as a corporate lawyer, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) remains comfortable on public office salary. With apartments in Brooklyn and Washington, D.C., two pensions and plenty of cash left over after putting his kids through college, Forbes estimates that Jeffries is worth about $2 million—far more than his Republican counterpart, House Speaker Mike Johnson, whose fortune Forbes put at $350,000 last year.

SPORTS + ENTERTAINMENT

The last leg of a lucrative race is on in New York City, and it’s not for mayor: Four contenders remain for three possible licenses to open the first casinos in the Big Apple. Billionaires Steve Cohen and Lim Kok Thay are among the backers of the proposed projects, and winning one of New York’s licenses would almost guarantee to increase their fortunes. “New York is the biggest opportunity for years to come,” says analyst Chad Beynon, who covers gambling and hospitality.

WORLD

White House spokesman Steven Cheung lashed out at the Norwegian Nobel Committee after it passed over President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize last week, stating that the committee “proved they place politics over peace” by awarding the prize to Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado. Trump had openly advocated for himself to win the award, and won endorsements from seven world leaders for the prize, according to the White House.

MORE: Accusations of insider trading hit prediction markets Polymarket and Kalshi in the wake of Friday’s Nobel Prize announcement. At 6:30 p.m. ET on Thursday, Machado’s odds of winning sat at just 3.6%, before jumping as high as 73% within just two hours. Still, if insider trading did occur, that’s not necessarily against the rules on prediction markets, which are largely unregulated.

DAILY COVER STORY

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MUNSTER CHEONG FOR…