U.S. President Donald Trump has entered the fusion energy sector through a $6 billion merger between his social media company, Trump Media and Technology Group, and Google-backed TAE Technologies. The all-stock deal, announced on Thursday, marks a bold expansion of the Trump business empire and reflects growing global interest in clean and scalable energy solutions for data-driven industries.
The merger comes just days after leading fusion companies met with the U.S. Department of Energy to seek greater federal support. The move positions Trump Media—best known for its Truth Social platform—at the forefront of the race to commercialise nuclear fusion, a technology long viewed as the “holy grail” of clean power.
Fusion and the AI Power Boom
The agreement, expected to close in mid-2026, comes amid a surge in electricity demand driven by artificial intelligence and data-centre growth. “At face value, this is a Barbenheimer mashup,” said Michael Ashley Schulman, chief investment officer at Running Point Capital Advisors. “Trump Media gets a dramatic new growth story tied to the AI power crunch, while TAE gains a fast lane to going public.”
Shareholders from both companies will each hold roughly 50% of the combined entity. Trump Media will serve as the holding company for Truth Social, TAE Power Solutions, and TAE Life Sciences. Under the deal, Trump Media will inject $200 million in cash at signing and a further $100 million upon regulatory filing.
Trump, who owns 114 million shares—about 40% of Trump Media—will see his stake drop to around 20% in the merged firm. Despite previous losses, Trump Media’s shares surged 35% following the announcement, recovering part of the value lost over the past year.
Renewed Focus on Fusion Energy
Interest in nuclear power has intensified as industries seek cleaner, more stable energy sources. Fusion energy, which replicates the process that powers the sun by fusing light atoms under extreme conditions, promises nearly limitless clean power but has yet to achieve commercial viability.
TAE Technologies, led by CEO Michl Binderbauer, has been one of the sector’s most prominent private players. Binderbauer and other executives met with Energy Department officials earlier this month after the creation of the agency’s first fusion-focused office. The merged company plans to begin building the world’s first utility-scale fusion power plant by the end of 2026.
Political and Ethical Concerns
The deal has already drawn political scrutiny. Representative Don Beyer, a Democrat and supporter of fusion research, said on X that the merger raises “significant concerns about conflicts of interest and avenues for potential corruption.” He called for congressional oversight to ensure that public resources and federal incentives for fusion development are used transparently.
Trump Media CEO Devin Nunes told investors the companies would “quickly seek approvals” once the merger is finalised. He and Binderbauer will serve as co-chief executives of the combined firm, with Donald Trump Jr. joining the board.
For Trump Media’s retail investors, the announcement provided a rare boost. “I can’t sit here and just be excited about a stock that’s done nothing but stupid stuff until today,” said Chad Nedohin, a Canadian investor and Truth Social group leader. “But today was awesome—I think it’s a brilliant move.”
with inputs from Reuters

