Trump Media launches Truth PSI, selling Wall Street millisecond-early access to Truth Social posts

Trump Media launches Truth PSI, selling Wall Street millisecond-early access to Truth Social posts

The service would let financial firms see posts from top accounts, potentially including Trump's own, before the general public.

Trump Media & Technology Group just invented a product that sounds like satire but is very much real. The company announced Truth PSI, a premium service that will sell Wall Street traders the ability to see posts from “highest-ranking” Truth Social accounts milliseconds before everyone else.

Those accounts could include the one belonging to the sitting President of the United States, who also happens to be the company’s largest shareholder.

How Truth PSI works, and why it matters

TMTG, which trades under the ticker DJT, plans to offer institutional subscribers early access to posts from top-tier Truth Social accounts. The target customer base is financial services firms looking for a trading edge on market-moving information.

If Trump posts something about tariffs, trade deals, or a specific company, paying subscribers would see it a hair faster than the rest of the market. In a world where algorithms trade on headlines in microseconds, even a small head start can translate into real money.

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The timing is notable. DJT shares hit an all-time low of around $7.06 in June 2026, reflecting a nearly 50% decline year-to-date. The company has struggled to generate meaningful revenue from Truth Social itself, and Truth PSI represents an attempt to find new monetization channels.

The corruption question

Critics have wasted no time calling Truth PSI what they see it as: brazen corruption dressed up as a product launch.

Trump holds a massive stake in TMTG. TMTG profits when institutional clients pay for early access to his posts. Those posts frequently move markets. The person creating the market-moving information is financially benefiting from its accelerated distribution.

Analyses have shown a pattern of Trump posting positively about specific companies shortly after acquiring their stocks. If that pattern is accurate, it raises the stakes considerably. It would mean the president is buying equities, then using his social media platform to boost them, while simultaneously selling premium access to those very posts.

National security hawks have also weighed in, noting that the service could give foreign entities or adversarial actors a mechanism for gaining privileged access to presidential communications, provided they’re willing to pay the subscription fee.

What this means for investors

Institutional firms now face a choice: subscribe and gain the edge, or refuse on ethical grounds and potentially fall behind competitors who don’t share those reservations.

The SEC has historically taken a dim view of information asymmetry when it crosses certain lines. Whether a social media company selling tiered access to a politician’s posts crosses those lines is genuinely uncharted territory.

For DJT shareholders, Truth PSI represents one of the few tangible revenue ideas the company has put forward. Whether it generates enough subscription revenue to meaningfully change TMTG’s financial trajectory depends entirely on uptake from financial institutions, many of whom may calculate that the reputational risk outweighs the trading advantage. The stock’s 50% year-to-date decline suggests the market isn’t exactly brimming with confidence in the company’s execution.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Trump Media launches Truth PSI, selling Wall Street millisecond-early access to Truth Social posts

Trump Media launches Truth PSI, selling Wall Street millisecond-early access to Truth Social posts

The service would let financial firms see posts from top accounts, potentially including Trump's own, before the general public.

Trump Media & Technology Group just invented a product that sounds like satire but is very much real. The company announced Truth PSI, a premium service that will sell Wall Street traders the ability to see posts from “highest-ranking” Truth Social accounts milliseconds before everyone else.

Those accounts could include the one belonging to the sitting President of the United States, who also happens to be the company’s largest shareholder.

How Truth PSI works, and why it matters

TMTG, which trades under the ticker DJT, plans to offer institutional subscribers early access to posts from top-tier Truth Social accounts. The target customer base is financial services firms looking for a trading edge on market-moving information.

If Trump posts something about tariffs, trade deals, or a specific company, paying subscribers would see it a hair faster than the rest of the market. In a world where algorithms trade on headlines in microseconds, even a small head start can translate into real money.

Advertisement

The timing is notable. DJT shares hit an all-time low of around $7.06 in June 2026, reflecting a nearly 50% decline year-to-date. The company has struggled to generate meaningful revenue from Truth Social itself, and Truth PSI represents an attempt to find new monetization channels.

The corruption question

Critics have wasted no time calling Truth PSI what they see it as: brazen corruption dressed up as a product launch.

Trump holds a massive stake in TMTG. TMTG profits when institutional clients pay for early access to his posts. Those posts frequently move markets. The person creating the market-moving information is financially benefiting from its accelerated distribution.

Analyses have shown a pattern of Trump posting positively about specific companies shortly after acquiring their stocks. If that pattern is accurate, it raises the stakes considerably. It would mean the president is buying equities, then using his social media platform to boost them, while simultaneously selling premium access to those very posts.

National security hawks have also weighed in, noting that the service could give foreign entities or adversarial actors a mechanism for gaining privileged access to presidential communications, provided they’re willing to pay the subscription fee.

What this means for investors

Institutional firms now face a choice: subscribe and gain the edge, or refuse on ethical grounds and potentially fall behind competitors who don’t share those reservations.

The SEC has historically taken a dim view of information asymmetry when it crosses certain lines. Whether a social media company selling tiered access to a politician’s posts crosses those lines is genuinely uncharted territory.

For DJT shareholders, Truth PSI represents one of the few tangible revenue ideas the company has put forward. Whether it generates enough subscription revenue to meaningfully change TMTG’s financial trajectory depends entirely on uptake from financial institutions, many of whom may calculate that the reputational risk outweighs the trading advantage. The stock’s 50% year-to-date decline suggests the market isn’t exactly brimming with confidence in the company’s execution.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.