Inner Circle Overview

among the White House inner circle, the cabinet, the president, military and other close advisors … what industries do these staff or their families control directly or in which do they hold major stock positions or serve on the boards of directors ?
ChatGPT said:

Here’s a breakdown of reported industry ties and holdings among top White House figures—including the president’s inner circle, cabinet members, military advisors, and others—with a focus on industries, boards, and family interests:


🏛️ Treasury & Economic Figures

Tom Krause (lead of Treasury “DOGE” team) & colleagues:

  • Hold major stock positions in big banks (JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, PNC, Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, Santander) and large tech/government contractors (Accenture, Oracle, Google, Amazon, Intuit)quiverquant.com+9propublica.org+9citizensforethics.org+9politico.com.
    → Possible conflict given Treasury’s role in debt issuance, payments, IRS initiatives.

Gary Cohn (former Trump NEC Director, adviser to current leadership too):

  • Ex‑Goldman Sachs COO with substantial investments/dividends tied to Goldman.

  • Serves on boards and advisory roles in tech (IBM, blockchain/cybersecurity startups like Hoyos Integrity, Spring Labs, Sotera Digital) politico.comen.wikipedia.org.


Cabinet-Level Interests

Trump-era

Jared Kushner & Ivanka Trump:

Steve Bannon:

Kellyanne Conway:

  • Owns modest stakes (under $200K) in consumer staples, pharma, and tobacco: Pfizer, Kraft Heinz, Mondelez, Altria, Philip Morris cbsnews.com+1foxbusiness.com+1.

Wilbur Ross:

  • Made a fortune restructuring distressed assets in steel, coal, telecom, textiles, and held board roles across dozens of firms en.wikipedia.org.

Elaine Chao (Sec. of Transportation):

Biden-era

Cabinet members by and large divested publicly traded stock to avoid conflictreddit.com+6citizensforethics.org+6citizensforethics.org+6. Exceptions:

  • Jennifer Granholm (Energy Sec.): retained small stakes in energy, finance, healthcare, real estate, and tech sectors (Invesco, Gilead, Cedar Fair, Vivint, Redfin, Teledoc, Uber) —likely de minimis citizensforethics.org.

  • Tom Vilsack (Ag Sec.): retained minor stock interest, also likely de minimis .


White House Senior Staff

Biden senior aides

Other senior officials sometimes retained small holdings in tech/growth stocks (Microsoft, Facebook, Google, IBM) until divestment reddit.com+3citizensforethics.org+3foxbusiness.com+3.

Trump-era staff

CNBC analysis shows staff held stocks in Apple, GE, Microsoft, and contract-heavy firms —like Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, United Technologies— common among defense and industrial advisors cnbc.com.


Broader Executive Branch Trends

  • Over 1,800 federal officials (2016–21) reportedly held FAANG stocks while their agencies oversaw those firmsreddit.com+2foxbusiness.com+2reddit.com+2.

  • Senior staff in Defense and EPA held holdings in aerospace, defense, oil, and gas sectors totaling up to $3.4 M and nearly $2 M, respectively reddit.com.


Summary Table

Person/Group Industries / Firms Held or Influential In
Tom Krause & DOGE team Major banks, tech, contractors
Gary Cohn Goldman Sachs, IBM, tech/biotech start‑ups
Kushner & Ivanka New York real estate
Steve Bannon Media, data firms, entertainment
Kellyanne Conway Pharma, food, tobacco stocks
Wilbur Ross Steel, coal, telecom, textile restructuring
Elaine Chao Shipping (family), construction materials (Vulcan)
Jennifer Granholm Energy, finance, healthcare, real estate, tech – small retained stakes
Catherine Russell (via spouse) BlackRock (investment management)
Ryan Montoya Cryptocurrency holdings
Susan Rice Tech, pharma, chemicals, timber, venture capital
Broader staff & exec branch FAANG, defense, aerospace, oil & gas stocks

⚖️ Ethical Implications

  • Trump-era figures often retained substantial assets in sectors directly overseen by their agencies—raising strong conflict concerns.

  • Biden-era officials have generally resigned or divested from problematic holdings; exceptions usually involve de minimis or mitigated holdings (via recusal, spousal holdings, etc.).

Overall, the pattern shows common White House ties to key sectors: finance (banks, BlackRock, Goldman), tech (FAANG, IBM, startups), defense/aerospace, energy, real estate, healthcare/pharma, and commodities/mining—with varying levels of transparency and mitigation efforts over time.