Trump Media to merge with Google-backed nuclear fusion firm

3 min

The $6 billion deal bets on AI-driven power demand and plans to build the world’s first utility-scale fusion plant

US President Donald Trump is moving into the fusion power sector through a $6 billion merger between his social media company and Google-backed TAE Technologies.

Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG), owner of the US president’s Truth Social platform, unveiled an unusual all-stock tie-up with the fusion firm on Thursday. The deal is a wager on surging electricity demand from the artificial intelligence boom and adds to the Trump family’s expanding slate of ventures spanning cryptocurrency, real estate, and mobile services.

TAE Chief Executive Michl Binderbauer told CNBC on Thursday that the deal would pair Trump Media’s “fortress balance sheet” with TAE’s technology platform.

“We’ve got capability and technology to really scale this,” Binderbauer told CNBC. “We’ve got the engineering prowess to do that, but the last piece of the puzzle was the capital,” he said. “Now, you’re marrying capital with that underlying base of technical capability.”

The merged company said it plans to select a site and start construction next year of the “world’s first utility-scale fusion power plant,” targeting electricity supply for artificial intelligence computing.

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Nuclear fusion is a highly experimental, early-stage technology that seeks to produce electricity by replicating the reaction that powers the sun. It is often described as a potential source of plentiful energy with little pollution and without greenhouse-gas emissions or long-lived radioactive waste.

Trump Media and TAE Technologies said shareholders in each company would own about 50% of the combined entity after the deal closes, which the companies expect to occur in mid-2026.

TAE, which is backed by Alphabet’s Google and oil major Chevron, is developing next-generation neutral beam systems for fusion and related applications, aiming to cut costs.

The deal comes as Trump’s loss-making social media business has struggled to generate meaningful revenue from Truth Social, the platform he uses to post commentary, announcements, and attacks.

Trump Media reported revenue of $927,900 for the three months ended September 30, down from just over $1.01 million a year earlier, while its net loss widened to $54.8 million from $19.2 million in the prior-year quarter.

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