
Luxury skyscrapers, golf courses and cryptocurrency: Trump's rapidly expanding Middle East business
The Trump family's business ties to the Middle East have more than tripled since the president's first term in office, a CNN tally of the deals has found, including a slew of new projects announced since he reclaimed the White House.
Amid the ongoing plans for luxury skyscrapers, golf courses and cryptocurrency deals in the region, Donald Trump is traveling to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates this week not only as US president, but also as the patriarch of a family whose business empire continues to expand in that part of the world.
His financial ties to the Middle East have prompted concerns among government ethicists who say it's difficult to determine whether he's acting in the best interest of the United States or his pocketbook.
'When the American people elect a president, they expect that person to work for them, not for profit,' said Robert Weissman, co-president of Public Citizen, a consumer rights advocacy group. Such financial links, Weissman and other watchdogs say, create an opportunity for foreign powers to seek to sway United States policy through those lucrative business deals.
But Trump has moved full steam ahead, seemingly embracing the overlap of his personal interests and those of the nation. He's shown he is comfortable boosting business ventures while in office – and doing so in public view. He set the tone by launching his own meme coin days before taking office, which spiked in value right after Trump offered a private dinner to its top investors last month.
'I've always had an instinct for making money,' Trump said in February at a conference hosted by a group launched by Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund. During the event, Trump promoted the US as ripe for investment but also touted his personal business achievements.
The Trump projects in the Middle East – many of which have been announced but not yet developed – largely involve licensing agreements with foreign developers that have partnered with the Trump Organization and paid to use the Trump name.
Past presidents have divested their businesses or put them in so-called blind trusts to avoid appearances of self-dealing. Trump has taken a different approach. His assets are in a trust managed by his children, and his son Eric Trump, executive vice president of the Trump Organization, has said the business will be walled off from the office of the presidency to avoid any ethical conflicts.
And while the Trump Organization in January pledged to make no new deals with foreign governments during the president's second term, a recently announced deal for a Trump-branded golf course in Qatar includes a firm backed by Qatar's sovereign wealth fund, Qatari Diar.
'Through this collaboration, we look forward to further strengthening Qatar's position as a preferred destination,' the Qatari government minister who heads that firm said when announcing the venture earlier this month.
Eric Trump said in a press release his organization is 'incredibly proud' to expand the Trump brand into Qatar through Qatari Diar, and a separate real estate company, Dar Global. Eric Trump told the New York Times last month Dar Global purchased the land for the golf course from Qatari Diar.
A Trump Organization spokesperson said the company has no affiliation, partnership or engagement with Qatari Diar or Qatar's government and added that the company's agreement to brand that project is with Dar Global. 'The Trump Organization does not conduct business with any government entity,' spokesperson Kimberly Benza said.
President Trump, who famously said 'I want America to win,' has repeatedly sought financial boosts for the US from Gulf nations. His administration boasted about securing a UAE commitment to invest $1.4 trillion in the US over a decade, and Saudi Arabia announced in January plans to expand trade and investment with the US by $600 billion over four years. In March, Trump called for Saudi Arabia to spend $1 trillion in the US.
Still, critics say the actions of Trump and his business in the first few months of his second term demonstrate a willingness to personally cash in on the presidency, and some fear foreign officials have helped him do so to advance their own agendas.
During Friday's press briefing, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt dismissed a question about whether the president would conduct personal business meetings on his trip.
'It's frankly ridiculous that anyone in this room would even suggest that President Trump is doing anything for his own benefit,' Leavitt said. 'This White House holds ourselves to the highest of ethical standards.'
Immediately after a mob of his supporters stormed the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, following his election loss, Trump became a pariah in much of the American business community. Hunkered down at Mar-a-Lago, he was banned from some social media apps. A software company stopped processing payments for his campaign website. Prominent financial firms distanced themselves. Even the hotel bearing Trump's name in the nation's capital was virtually empty.
'We live in the age of cancel culture,' Eric Trump said, reacting to those moves shortly after the Capitol riot.
But some business leaders stood by Trump, such as his friends in the Middle East.
'I would welcome the opportunity of expanding our relationship,' Hussain Sajwani, the head of DAMAC Properties, the developer of a Trump golf course in Dubai that opened in 2017, said a week after the January 6 insurrection.
Soon, entities in the region offered new opportunities to the Trump family.
After the PGA canceled its tournament at Trump's New Jersey golf course, Trump partnered with LIV Golf, a new professional golf circuit backed by Saudi Arabia. The league hosts some of its tournaments at Trump properties, including one in April.
In recent years, Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund, led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, widely known as MBS, invested $2 billion in a private equity firm launched by Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner. Kushner and MBS developed a close personal relationship when Kushner served as an adviser to Trump during his first term. Though Kushner said he would not return to the White House, multiple Trump officials and people close to Kushner say he has been informally advising US officials on negotiations with Arab leaders, CNN reported Friday.
In the neighboring nation of Oman, the government's tourism arm in 2022 partnered on plans to build a Trump-branded resort, along with villas and a golf club, near the capital city of Muscat. Last summer, Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. commemorated the launch of the joint venture by dining with Oman's crown prince near a stage emblazoned with the words, 'The Ultimate Power Move.'
While those deals materialized during Trump's time out of office, his business's expansion in the region appears to have been supercharged after his electoral win in November.
Dar Global, the real estate firm developing the Oman project as well as other Trump-branded towers announced before the election, has since promoted plans for two additional projects in Saudi Arabia's Riyadh capital and the golf club in Qatar. Dar Global's parent company, which is based in Riyadh, has committed to advancing Crown Prince MBS' ambitious plan to modernize Saudi Arabia's economy.
'Don't stop believing in the Trump brand,' Dar Global's CEO, Ziad El Chaar, said in a speech posted online this month in which he touted one of the projects planned for Dubai.
At that same event, Eric Trump referenced how his organization has done 'so many projects' with Dar Global and added, 'I'm not going to break any news, but I think there's a few more to come.' He has separately commended Gulf nations for policies that favor development and reject what he has called 'woke cancel culture.'
Just Sunday, President Trump wrote in a Truth Social post that his administration would accept a plane to replace its Air Force One as a 'GIFT, FREE OF CHARGE.' Two people familiar with the agreement told CNN the 747-8 was from the Qatari royal family. However, a Qatari official said the plane is technically being gifted from the Qatari Ministry of Defense to the Pentagon, which would retrofit the plane for the president's use with security features. The plane will be donated to Trump's presidential library after he leaves office, a person familiar with the matter told CNN. Trump added that the plane will 'go directly' to his presidential library after he leaves office. 'I wouldn't be using it,' he said.
Companies in the region have also boosted Trump's crypto firm, World Liberty Financial. UAE-based DWF Labs announced in April the purchase of $25 million worth of the firm's tokens. MGX, an Emirati-backed investment firm, agreed to use a cryptocurrency launched by the firm for a $2 billion investment in crypto exchange Binance, according to an announcement from World Liberty co-founder Zach Witkoff, whose father is Trump's special envoy to the Middle East. The chairman of MGX is the deputy ruler of Abu Dhabi and UAE national security adviser.
That announcement from Witkoff prompted Democratic Sens. Jeffrey Merkley and Elizabeth Warren to press the US Office of Government Ethics to investigate the deal, which they stated could 'open our government to a startling degree of foreign influence and the potential for a quid pro quo that could endanger national security,' according to a letter they sent last week.
'These Gulf nations are very actively trying to advance their standing in the world and having the president of the United States both do business in their country and come in an official capacity conveys very significant respectability,' said Noah Bookbinder, president of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. 'It may be a win-win for these Gulf countries and for the president and his businesses, but it's less clear that it's a win for the American people.'
'This is a very delicate region of the world, where there are really important decisions that need to be made about where to deploy the military, how to engage in peace negotiations, and about economic agreements,' Bookbinder said. 'You want the President making decisions based on what's in the interest of the American people… not based on what's going to be most helpful to his businesses.'
American presidents typically visit one of the country's closest allies during their first major trip abroad. Since World War II, most presidents have traveled to Mexico, Canada or the United Kingdom, according to the State Department. Not Trump.
In 2017, the newly minted president traveled to Saudi Arabia where he was greeted with a lavish reception. Then, he signed an arms deal with King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud. Though Trump traveled to Italy for the pope's funeral last month, his first official presidential trip during his second term is again to Saudi Arabia.
The United States and Saudi Arabia have a long history of diplomacy, mainly centered on a shared interest: oil. But Trump's relationship with Saudi Arabia was particularly close during his first term, and the kingdom, which has faced allegations of human rights abuses, benefitted. When the journalist Jamal Khashoggi – a Saudi dissident and an American resident – was killed and dismembered at a Saudi consulate in Turkey after criticizing the Saudi kingdom, the United States' Central Intelligence Agency reported that the crown prince was behind the assassination. Trump questioned his own government's conclusion, instead backing MBS.
'It could very well be that the Crown Prince had knowledge of this tragic event — maybe he did and maybe he didn't!' Trump wrote in a statement. The crown prince has denied involvement in Khashoggi's killing.
Ben Freeman, who directs a foreign policy program at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, noted that geopolitics in the region are extraordinarily complicated and Gulf nations have an array of foreign policy positions that don't align with those of the US. He said additional deals in the region, depending on the specifics, could create reputational risks for the US and even undermine national security.
'There is seemingly this tit-for-tat where the Saudi regime, especially, makes investments in Trump… and Saudi Arabia is the first destination of his first state trip abroad,' said Freeman. 'There's a real risk that personal interests are trumping the national interest.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Nervy markets await Fed as Mideast conflict rages on
By Rae Wee SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Concerns over escalating hostilities in the Middle East stayed front and centre in markets on Wednesday, sending oil prices higher and investors rushing for the safety of U.S. Treasuries and the dollar while dumping stocks. Investors have grown increasingly nervous over the possibility of a more direct U.S. military involvement as the Israel-Iran air war entered a sixth day, with President Donald Trump calling for Iran's unconditional surrender and warning U.S. patience was wearing thin. "Clearly the Middle East issues have not been solved, and comments by President Trump just mean that things could get more dangerous in that part of the world," said Joseph Capurso, head of international and sustainable economics at Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA). "The markets are trying to figure out that risk of a big U.S. military intervention. It's hard to say exactly what the market is thinking, but judging by the oil price and currencies, they're certainly pricing in at least some risk that something goes very bad there." Oil prices extended their climb on Wednesday, with Brent crude futures up 0.33% to $76.70 per barrel while U.S. crude rose 0.45% to $75.18 a barrel. Both had jumped more than 4% in the previous session. The broad risk-off moves across markets also continued to gather pace. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.26% as did EUROSTOXX 50 futures, which declined 0.4%. U.S. stock futures were little changed after the cash session on Wall Street ended in the red overnight. In currencies, the dollar firmed at a one-week high of 145.445 yen and held to most of its gains against other peers. The euro struggled to recover from its 0.7% fall on Tuesday, and last bought $1.1487. Sterling edged slightly higher to $1.3435, having slid 1.1% in the previous session. The spike in oil prices is a negative for the yen and euro at the margin as both Japan and the EU are major importers of energy, while the United States is an exporter. "The war has demonstrated that the U.S. dollar still retains a bit of haven status in certain situations, such as when the war is seen to raise the risk of disrupting global oil supply, and when the war diverts traders' attention away from those risks that are U.S.-centric," said Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie Group. FED OUTCOME The conflict in the Middle East, combined with prolonged uncertainty over Trump's tariffs and signs of fragility in the U.S. economy, make for a challenging backdrop ahead of the Federal Reserve's policy decision later on Wednesday. U.S. retail sales fell by a more-than-expected 0.9% in May, data showed on Tuesday, marking the biggest drop in four months. Expectations are for the Fed to stand pat on rates, though focus will also be on the central bank's updated projections for the economy and the benchmark interest rate. "We do not anticipate much novelty from the Fed," said Erik Weisman, chief economist at MFS Investment Management. "The only area of interest may come from the new set of forecasts under the Summary of Economic Projections, which may point to slightly slower growth, combined with slightly higher inflation." U.S. Treasury yields were steady in Asia after falling on Tuesday, as investors scooped up the safe-haven bonds in the wake of latest developments in the Israel-Iran conflict. Bond yields move inversely to prices. The benchmark 10-year yield was last at 4.4027%, having fallen roughly 6 basis points in the previous session. The two-year yield stood at 3.9581%. [US/] Elsewhere, spot gold eased 0.12% to $3,384.73 an ounce. [GOL/] Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
US Fed set to hold rates steady as it guards against inflation
The US central bank is expected to hold interest rates steady Wednesday after its key policy meeting, as officials gauge the impact of tariffs on inflation -- and despite President Donald Trump's calls for rate cuts. The Federal Reserve has kept the benchmark lending rate unchanged this year at a range between 4.25 percent and 4.50 percent, and analysts expect policymakers will remain on the sidelines until price increases cool sustainably. While Trump has imposed a 10 percent tariff on most US trading partners and steeper levies on imports of steel, aluminum and autos in recent months, these have not triggered a price surge so far. This is partly because Trump has backed off or postponed some of his most punishing salvos, while businesses in turn have relied on existing inventory to avoid hiking consumer costs immediately. In May, the consumer price index edged up to 2.4 percent on-year from 2.3 percent in April, underscoring the limited effect of levies for now. But economists expect it will take several months for tariffs to flow into consumer prices, and the Fed is proceeding cautiously with interest rate adjustments. "The Fed would no doubt be cutting again by now if not for the uncertainty regarding tariffs and a recent escalation of tensions in the Middle East," said KPMG senior economist Benjamin Shoesmith. The prospect of higher inflation will probably keep the central bank in "wait-and-see mode for much of this year," he added in a note. Officials will want to see "if those factors trigger more than a transitory increase in prices," he said. Beyond inflation data, policymakers are also trying to keep expectations "anchored," a state in which consumers expect price increases to remain low and steady. If there are widespread expectations of price hikes, inflation could rise as businesses increase customer costs and workers seek higher wages. On Wednesday, the Fed is also due to release its latest economic projections on growth, unemployment and inflation. Analysts will monitor if the Fed still expects to make two more rate cuts this year as well. - 'Saber-rattling' - For his part, Trump has repeatedly urged the independent central bank to slash rates, calling Fed Chair Jerome Powell "too late" in doing so and "a fool" for holding off further cuts at the bank's May meeting. Trump has pointed to benign US inflation in arguing for interest rate cuts. More recently, he also cast such a move as a way for the country to "pay much less interest on debt coming due," overlooking the fact that lower interest rates usually raise consumer prices. Powell however has maintained that the Fed's rate-setting committee would make its decisions based solely on objective and non-political analysis, the Fed previously said. The Fed chair has also defended US central bank independence over rates in his recent meeting with Trump. Despite Trump's pressure, Allianz Trade North America senior economist Dan North expects Powell will not be too shaken by "saber-rattling." "Consumers are still spending, labor markets still creating jobs, although it is in fact slowing a little bit," North told AFP. "Certainly, the health of the economy doesn't beg for the Fed to cut rates," he added. "So we think they're on hold till the end of the year." myl-bys/dw Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


The Verge
33 minutes ago
- The Verge
Senate passes GENIUS stablecoin bill in a win for the crypto industry
In a 68-30 vote on Tuesday evening, the Senate overwhelmingly passed the GENIUS Act with bipartisan support. Eighteen Democrats joined the majority of Republicans in passing the bill, which is the first to establish a federal regulatory framework for stablecoins, crypto tokens that are pegged to the value of the US dollar. In the past year, and after the crypto industry funneled over $131 million into Donald Trump's presidential campaign, the Republican Party has embraced the crypto industry with enthusiasm, voting overwhelmingly for the bill's passage. There were two GOP holdouts: Senators Rand Paul of Kentucky and Josh Hawley of Missouri, both ardent critics of Big Tech. The bill now goes to the House of Representatives, which is working on its own companion legislation, the STABLE Act. Its passage had not always been assured. Back in May, nine Democrats who'd previously supported the GENIUS Act suddenly reversed course, asking to revise the bill's text, and days later, Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Ron Wyden (D-WA) successfully killed an attempt to bring the bill to a floor vote by citing several current events involving the Trump family's crypto ventures, including a controversial dinner for people holding large amounts of their memecoin $TRUMP. Warren, the ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee and a longtime consumer protection hawk, ultimately voted against the final version of the GENIUS Act. During a June 11th floor speech, she stated that the bill did not have adequate regulatory guardrails in place to prevent corruption: 'It would make Trump the regulator of his own financial company and, importantly, the regulator of his competitors.' It's a win, however, for the burgeoning digital assets industry, which has poured hundreds of millions into the political influence game in Washington, hiring political consultants and even a few Members of Congress on their behalf. In an interview prior to Tuesday's vote, Seth Hertline, Head of Global Policy at the crypto wallet company Ledger, described the GENIUS Act as a political bellwether for the industry as a whole. 'If the GENIUS Act derails, everything behind it derails,' he told The Verge.