Trump sons’ crypto-linked bets run into mining security and financing conflict overseas – FT


Make preferred on

New Financial Times reporting says Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump are set to gain exposure to a Kazakhstan tungsten venture through Skyline Builders, a Nasdaq-listed company that has signed a transaction agreement with Cove Kaz Capital Group to create Kaz Resources Inc. if completed.

Skyline and Cove, Kaz said, is expected to trade under the ticker KAZR if the deal closes.

The target projects sit within a US critical minerals policy lane focused on supply-chain resilience and reduced reliance on Chinese-controlled resources.

Public transaction materials state that the Export-Import Bank of the United States issued a letter of interest for up to $900 million, while the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation issued letters of interest exploring up to $700 million in debt financing and project development funding.

The governance issue is specific. The visible chain links FT-reported Trump-family investment exposure, a public-market shell, and federal financing interest around the same asset.

It also leaves the central questions unresolved: what the Trump sons knew, whether they had any role in the government-support process, whether financing becomes binding, and what their ultimate economics will be.

Skyline-Cove Kaz deal chain

The chain runs through a public shell

The first layer is Skyline itself. The company disclosed an August 2025 private placement that raised about $17.8 million and left Quantum Leap Energy with voting control after related transactions.

Dominari Securities was one of the placement agents.

FT reporting supplies the private-investment piece of that chain: it says Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump bought into Skyline in August through American Ventures, a special purpose vehicle run by a Dominari subsidiary, and added to the position on Oct. 28, 2025.

Skyline’s August resale filing and October placement filing separately establish the financing dates, while a later registration statement identifies American Ventures series exposure tied to those placements.

The SEC filings leave the Trump sons unnamed in those placements. They do establish the placement chronology and the American Ventures series exposure that the FT connects to the brothers.

The Dominari link is visible in corporate filings. Dominari disclosed in its quarterly report that it held 90% membership interests in American Ventures Management LLC and American Ventures IM LLC, which served as the management and investment manager for American Ventures LLC.

Its later annual report describes Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump as advisory-board appointees and 5%-or-more stockholders of Dominari.

Dominari also filed a February 2025 release announcing their advisory-board roles.

The second layer came on Oct. 31, 2025, when Skyline disclosed that it had agreed to pay $20 million for an approximate 20% membership interest in a Delaware LLC engaged in critical minerals.

Skyline’s Oct. 31 filing did not name the LLC. The FT identified it as Kaz Resources, tied to Cove Capital and Cove Kaz.

The third layer arrived on April 30, 2026. Skyline and Cove Kaz announced a transaction agreement to combine, with the planned company operating as Kaz Resources Inc. and trading on Nasdaq as KAZR if completed.

A definitive-agreements summary separately described the Cove Kaz transaction structure before the April market announcement.

The same announcement says closing is expected in the fourth quarter of 2026 or early 2027, subject to shareholder approval, regulatory approvals, an effective SEC registration statement, and other conditions.

Entity Role in the chain Current status Caveat
American Ventures Vehicle through which FT reporting says the Trump sons bought into Skyline Linked to Dominari management entities in filings Exact Trump-son exposure is undisclosed
Skyline Builders Nasdaq-listed public vehicle Signed the Cove Kaz transaction agreement Merger has not closed
Cove Kaz and Kaz Resources Critical-minerals platform and assets Skyline and Cove Kaz agreed to combine into Kaz Resources Inc. if completed Agency letters remain conditional expressions of interest

The governance question begins with access to the chain, then moves to the chain’s status, and only then reaches the policy overlay.

The deal works better as a layered transaction map than as a single completed transfer of value.

The financing support is still conditional

The Nov. 6 venture announcement placed the Kazakhstan projects inside a national-security supply-chain argument.

Cove Capital and Tau-Ken Samruk said Cove Kaz would hold 70% and the Kazakh national mining company would hold 30% of a venture to develop Northern Katpar and Upper Kairakty.

The announcement described the deposits as a major undeveloped tungsten resource and put the total development cost at about $1.1 billion.

That cost estimate is smaller than the headline financing envelope, but the comparison only describes scale.

The broader minerals backdrop sits in official U.S. data, too. USGS tracks the critical mineral supply context in its Mineral Commodity Summaries 2026 and maintains a tungsten data hub to support the industrial supply chain.

The April transaction materials say EXIM issued a letter of interest for up to $900 million. DFC separately said it had issued letters of interest seeking up to $700 million in debt financing and project development funding tied to the Northern Katpar investment.

Those figures are conditional maximums, not binding commitments or proof that the agencies will provide stacked final funding.

The distinction is operational. A letter of interest signals that an agency is willing to consider backing under stated conditions.

EXIM’s guidance describes a letter of interest as a tool that can outline possible financing terms, fees, and conditions before a final commitment.

It is a useful policy signal, especially in a strategic sector, but it remains short of a binding funding contract.

That status sets the evidentiary boundary for the conflict-risk analysis. The FT also stated the central caveat: there was no suggestion that Donald Trump Jr. or Eric Trump knew Cove was close to securing US administration backing when they made their initial investments in Skyline through American Ventures, or that they influenced the award.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.