President Trump’s May 2026 OGE Form 278-T disclosure revealed something genuinely unusual in volume, with more than 3,600 individual stock trades in the first quarter of 2026, with heavy concentration in AI infrastructure bought during the March selloff. Executive-branch disclosures report value ranges and dates, not share counts, so any precision beyond brackets like “$1 million to $5 million” is false confidence.
The direction, though, is unambiguous. He bought the dip in NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA | NVDA Price Prediction), Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD), Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO), and added government-tech names Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ:PLTR) and Axon Enterprise (NASDAQ:AXON).
The NVIDIA trade was the marquee position
The standout entry was NVIDIA, with purchases reportedly ranging up to roughly $5 million placed ahead of a Meta chip-deal announcement. The timing window matters. NVDA fell 7.65% between January 2 and March 31, 2026, dropping from $188.62 to $174.20. The fundamentals during that drawdown were not weakening.
Q1 FY27 revenue of $81.615 billion grew 85.23% year-over-year, data center revenue grew 92%, and Jensen Huang described AI factory buildout as “the largest infrastructure expansion in human history.” Buying a 75% gross-margin franchise at a discount was a defensible trade for anyone, not just a sitting president.
AMD and Broadcom completed the silicon basket
Both AMD and Broadcom landed in the filings on similar logic. AMD shed 8.97% in Q1 2026, then ripped to 128.08% year-to-date gains by June 11. Broadcom dropped 10.78% over the same Q1 window, from $346.92 to $309.51, before recovering on AI semiconductor strength. The thread connecting all three is custodial.
NVIDIA, AMD, and Broadcom together supply the GPU compute, accelerators, and networking silicon that hyperscalers are committing tens of billions to absorb.
NVIDIA alone disclosed $119.0 billion in total supply-related commitments. When the broader market sold semis in March, it sold the infrastructure beneath an AI capex cycle whose order books were filling, not draining.
Palantir and Axon are policy plays
PLTR and AXON sit in a different bucket. Both benefit from federal procurement priorities under the current administration. Palantir on intelligence and defense data integration, Axon on policing and counter-drone systems. Palantir’s Q1 2026 U.S. government revenue grew 84% to $687 million, and CEO Alex Karp noted the company’s Rule of 40 score of 145%, a feat matched only by NVIDIA, Micron and SK hynix.
The thesis hinges on who writes the checks. The FY 2027 defense budget request includes $20.5 billion for cyberspace activities, the procurement pool both companies feed from. That said, PLTR has been the more punished name lately, down 22% year-to-date through June 11, and AXON down 25% over the same stretch.
What the retail investor should actually take from this
A presidential disclosure documents what was bought and roughly when, not why, and not whether the buyer intends to hold. The trades cluster around a March dip that any momentum-aware investor would have noticed in real time. Following the trade today means paying post-recovery prices on NVDA and AMD, while PLTR and AXON still sit well below their year-end 2025 marks.
The defensible takeaway is the framework. AI infrastructure leaders bought on weakness, plus government-tech exposure aligned with budget priorities. For a retirement-focused investor, that is a portfolio frame worth borrowing. The framework is worth studying. The entry price is worth your own work.