In what might be the most unexpected corporate marriage of 2025, shares of Trump Media & Technology Group (DJT) surged more than 30% Thursday after announcing a $6 billion merger with nuclear fusion company TAE Technologies. Yes, you read that right: the company behind Truth Social is now diving headfirst into the business of harnessing the power of the sun.
The price tag breaks down to $200 million in cash at signing, plus another $100 million when they file the paperwork with regulators. But the real story here isn't just the numbers. It's the cast of characters this deal brings together under one roof.
A Fusion Startup With Heavy-Hitting Backers
TAE Technologies isn't some garage operation. Founded in 1998, the company has been working on commercial, utility-scale fusion energy with the goal of building power plants that actually deliver electricity to the grid. They've raised over $1.3 billion in private funding, including a $150 million round just this past June.
The investor list reads like a who's who of corporate America: Alphabet Inc. (GOOG) (Google's parent company), Chevron (CVX) through its venture arm, Goldman Sachs (GS), Sumitomo Corporation of America, and NEA, among others. Google isn't just writing checks either. They've been collaborating with TAE on fusion research since 2014.
When the merger closes in mid-2026, TAE shareholders will own approximately 50% of the combined company, making this a true merger rather than a simple acquisition.
More Than Just Fusion Dreams
TAE Technologies isn't a one-trick pony. Beyond the main fusion energy business, they own TAE Power Solutions, which develops energy storage and power delivery systems for AI data centers and electric vehicles. There's also TAE Life Sciences, focused on radiotherapy treatments for cancer patients. So even if fusion takes longer than expected, the company has other irons in the fire.
The fusion timeline is ambitious but not entirely pie-in-the-sky. TAE has already built five generations of prototypes and is working on a sixth. The roadmap calls for breaking ground on the first utility-scale fusion power plant in 2026, with a prototype facility named Da Vinci expected to be operational in the early 2030s delivering commercial fusion power.
"We're delighted to continue our relationship with Google, who have not only provided funding to TAE but collaborated closely in research and development over many years. With this latest fundraise, we look forward to accelerating our efforts to deliver commercial fusion power," TAE Technologies CEO Michl Binderbauer said after the June funding round.
The Trump Connection Gets Complicated
Here's where things get interesting from a governance perspective. President Donald Trump moved 114,750,000 shares of DJT into a trust back in December 2024, making his son, Donald Trump Jr., the trustee with sole voting power. Trump now has indirect rather than direct ownership of the shares.
Trump Jr. will serve as one of nine board members on the combined company. Meanwhile, President Trump has been signing executive orders throughout 2025 to bolster the nuclear energy sector. He's been a vocal proponent of nuclear power, positioning it as critical for America's energy security and AI dominance.
You can see the potential issue: any future pro-nuclear legislation or executive actions could directly benefit what would become one of the Trump family's largest investments. It's the kind of setup that will likely draw scrutiny from ethics watchdogs and political opponents.
Building a Conglomerate
If the merger goes through as planned, Trump Media would own quite the portfolio: TAE Technologies (fusion energy), TAE Power Solutions (energy storage for data centers and EVs), TAE Life Sciences (cancer treatment), plus its existing properties Truth Social, Truth+, Truth.Fi, and other digital assets. It's a head-spinning combination of social media, nuclear fusion, and cancer therapy.
The companies framed the merger around national priorities, stating it would help "fusion power to blaze path toward America's AI dominance and energy security." With AI data centers consuming enormous amounts of electricity, there's genuine logic to investing in next-generation power sources.
Market Reaction
Investors clearly liked what they heard. Trump Media & Technology (DJT) shares jumped 30% to $13.62 on Thursday, though they're still trading well below their 52-week high of $43.46 and remain down 60% year-to-date in 2025. The stock has a 52-week trading range of $10.18 to $43.46.
Whether this represents a genuine pivot toward America's energy future or just another chapter in the wild saga of Trump Media remains to be seen. One thing's for sure: when the deal closes, it'll create one of the first publicly traded nuclear fusion companies, giving retail investors a chance to bet on the technology that's been "30 years away" for the past 50 years.




