Why is Truth Social owner Trump Media merging with a fusion energy firm?

A picture


Trump Media & Technology Group, owner of Donald Trump’s social media platform, Truth Social, announced a merger on Wednesday with a company developing fusion energy technology.TAE Technologies, an energy company founded in 1998, will join with Trump Media via a $6bn merger that it promises will propel it to build “the world’s first utility-scale fusion power plant” next year.The move signals that the president and his family continue to look for profit-seeking ventures outside of Truth Social, which remains tiny compared with rival platforms such as Facebook, Instagram and X (formerly Twitter).Here is what we know about the deal so far.The media company, which has dabbled in financial services, is engineering a huge pivot and diving headfirst into nuclear energy.

Trump Media has “built uncancellable infrastructure to secure free expression online for Americans”, according to its CEO, Devin Nunes.“And now we’re taking a big step forward toward a revolutionary technology that will cement America’s global energy dominance for generations.”Nunes, a former congressman, is set to serve as co-CEO of the new company with Michl Binderbauer, TAE’s CEO.Shareholders of each firm will own about 50% of the combined company.The company will be overseen by a nine-member board of directors, which will include Trump.

Trump Media has also agreed to give TAE $300m in cash to continue developing its fusion energy technology.The deal comes amid soaring demand for new energy sources that can feed artificial intelligence and the massive datacenters that power it.While this deal is a big bet on fusion power meeting that demand, a commercially viable reactor has never been built.Kind of.Trump launched the company in 2021 to be a competitor to the big tech companies that had kicked him off their platforms at the time, including Facebook and Twitter.

But Truth Social has only a few million active users, a speck compared with the larger platforms.Though Truth Social went public on the stock market as part of Trump Media in 2024, the wider firm has been racking up losses: $54.8m in the three months to 30 September, more than double those incurred during the same period of 2024.Shares of the company soared when Trump was re-elected for a second term, but they are down almost 60% since the start of the year.The merger with TAE, while seemingly out of left field, is on track with the company’s attempts to diversify Trump Media’s assets beyond Truth Social.

In recent years, it built out a massive, volatile cryptocurrency treasury and tried to create new financial products and betting markets.TAE is one of a handful of companies that is working on developing fusion energy, a type of nuclear energy that mimics the power of the sun to produce energy.While a type of nuclear energy, fusion energy is different from the nuclear energy that was developed in the 1940s, which was created through fission.Fission energy was created by splitting atoms, whereas fusion energy creates energy by forcing atoms together.The technology is still in its early stages, and some scientists are skeptical that it can be produced at a commercial scale.

But demand for clean, safe energy has soared with the AI revolution, which has put huge pressure on the energy grid.This is why tech companies and AI leaders such as Google’s parent company, Alphabet, and OpenAI’s Sam Altman have been investing in fusion energy companies including TAE and Helion Energy, which are trying to commercialize fusion energy.The move by the Trump family business into the fusion energy space comes amid steps by the Trump White House to bolster the technology.Since entering office in January, the US president has made moves to deregulate the nuclear energy industry and accelerate technology development, including signing executive orders that deem developing new technology as an issue of national security.Trump’s Department of Energy has especially been focused on the new technology, with the creation of a new Office of Fusion whose goal is to get fusion technology ready for commercial use as quickly as possible.

After the merger, TAE said it will start construction on a utility-scale fusion power plant that it hopes will generate power for commercial use by 2031.In an interview with CNN, TAE’s Binderbauer said more capital will mean the company can build its plant more quickly.“The velocity [at which] you can get the capital is differentiating.If I raise $2bn over five years, I can’t build the plant sufficiently fast,” Binderbauer said.“Sometimes you get lucky and you meet the right people.

”Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush, noted that TAE will probably get “major political support from President Trump” because of the deal, though Binderbauer told CNN that he welcomes regulatory scrutiny.“I’m not looking for anything special,” Binderbauer said.“Perhaps you get more scrutinized from a regulatory perspective and that’s good because it will give the world confidence that technology is what matters.”
trendingSee all
A picture

Independent businesses: have your online sales been affected by the rise of AI?

We’d like to find out more about how your business has been affected by changes to online searches amid the rise of AI.Independent businesses have traditionally relied on online advertising for increased visibility and sales, even if they are based on the high street. However, with the introduction of AI mode and AI Overview summaries on Google, and the proliferation of LLMs such as ChatGPT or Google Gemini, people are altering their search habits, which may affect the online visibility of small businesses.With this in mind, we want to find out if there have been any changes to organic traffic to your business site or online sales in recent months. Are customers still able to discover your company online? Have you found new opportunities or have there been significant challenges? How is your business innovating to get seen online? Are you changing strategy?We’d also like to hear from customers – have you found it harder to track down independent retailers, or find relevant products online?You can tell us by using the form below or by messaging us

A picture

Former Yodel owner probably forged mother’s signature in takeover bid, judge rules

The former owner of Yodel probably forged his mother’s signature in an attempt to seize back control of the parcel delivery company, according to an “extraordinary” ruling issued on Friday by a high court judge.Jacob Corlett, a 31-year-old logistics entrepreneur, launched a takeover of Yodel in January 2024, buying the financially distressed company for £1 as part of a plan to merge it with his own parcels company, Shift.Within six months, Yodel was unable to pay its debts to HM Revenue and Customs and commercial partners, forcing Corlett to sell the business – also for £1 – to another company called Judge Logistics Ltd (JLL) in June 2024.Earlier this year, the Polish parcel locker company InPost bought JLL in a £106m deal.After a suit brought against him by Yodel, including for breach of fiduciary duty during his time as a director, Corlett launched an unsuccessful counterclaim intended to regain control of Yodel

A picture

The Com: the growing cybercrime network behind recent Pornhub hack

Ransomware hacks, data theft, crypto scams and sextortion cover a broad range of cybercrimes carried out by an equally varied list of assailants.But there is also an English-speaking criminal ecosystem carrying out these activities that defies conventional categorisation. Nonetheless, it does have a name: the Com.Short for community, the Com is a loose affiliation of cybercriminals, largely native English language speakers typically aged from 16 to 25. Its activities run from crippling the IT systems of British retailers to phoning in bomb threats to schools and encouraging teenage girls to harm themselves

A picture

Sony collars Snoopy in £340m deal to take control of Peanuts franchise

Sony has taken control of Charles Schulz’s Peanuts franchise including Snoopy and Charlie Brown in a deal worth C$630m (£340m).The Japanese conglomerate has bought 41% of Peanuts Holdings, which owns the intellectual property Schulz created, from the Canadian children’s entertainment company WildBrain.The deal raises Sony’s total stake, which it began building in 2018, to 80%. The Schulz family owns the remaining 20%.Peanuts, which first appeared as a comic strip in seven newspapers in 1950 and ran daily until the cartoonist’s death in 2000, has gone on to become a global franchise spanning TV, toys, films and theme park attractions

A picture

Your Guardian sport weekend: Premier League, NFL and boxing

Bryan Armen Graham straps in for live coverage of events in Miami as the former two-time world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua meets the YouTuber turned boxer Jake Paul across eight three-minute rounds. Given Paul’s 13-fight career consists mainly of former UFC stars or faded boxing greats, this contest and Joshua’s involvement has sparked a backlash, particularly since Paul, who has regularly fought at cruiserweight since he swapped life as an influencer to enter the world of boxing, came in at 15st 6lb to give away a hefty 26.8lb difference to his British opponent.There’s no better way into the weekend’s footballing action than our rolling blog as Dominic Booth sets up Saturday’s big matches. Breaking news, team updates and the vibe from around the grounds keeps you bang up to date with all the latest developments

A picture

Proud Welshman Sam Thomas eyes National glory after Steel Ally’s Ascot romp

Sam Thomas has his string in excellent form going into the busy Christmas programme and he saddled his fourth winner from only seven runners in December as Steel Ally registered an impressive success in the Grade Two Noel Novice Chase at Ascot on Friday.Steel Ally was the 11-4 third-favourite in a field of five runners but was travelling and jumping well from the off for Dylan Johnston, his jockey. No Questions Asked, the 7-5 favourite, briefly threatened to mount a challenge as he moved closer at the third-last but Steel Ally was clear by the second-last and eventually crossed the line nine lengths ahead of Push The Button (12-1).The Noel Novice Chase is staged over two miles and nearly three furlongs, and Steel Ally is quoted at around 33-1 for the Arkle Trophy Novice Chase, over two miles, on the opening day of next year’s Cheltenham Festival.The Welsh Grand National at Chepstow on 27 December is a big target for Thomas over the festive period, and he will saddle two fancied runners, Jubilee Express and Shomen Uchi, in next weekend’s marathon as he attempts to follow up his win with Iwilldoit in 2021