Básico
Spot
Opera con criptomonedas libremente
Margen
Multiplica tus beneficios con el apalancamiento
Convertir e Inversión automática
0 Fees
Opera cualquier volumen sin tarifas ni deslizamiento
ETF
Obtén exposición a posiciones apalancadas de forma sencilla
Trading premercado
Opera nuevos tokens antes de su listado
Contrato
Accede a cientos de contratos perpetuos
TradFi
Oro
Plataforma global de activos tradicionales
Opciones
Hot
Opera con opciones estándar al estilo europeo
Cuenta unificada
Maximiza la eficacia de tu capital
Trading de prueba
Introducción al trading de futuros
Prepárate para operar con futuros
Eventos de futuros
Únete a eventos para ganar recompensas
Trading de prueba
Usa fondos virtuales para probar el trading sin asumir riesgos
Lanzamiento
CandyDrop
Acumula golosinas para ganar airdrops
Launchpool
Staking rápido, ¡gana nuevos tokens con potencial!
HODLer Airdrop
Holdea GT y consigue airdrops enormes gratis
Launchpad
Anticípate a los demás en el próximo gran proyecto de tokens
Puntos Alpha
Opera activos on-chain y recibe airdrops
Puntos de futuros
Gana puntos de futuros y reclama recompensas de airdrop
Inversión
Simple Earn
Genera intereses con los tokens inactivos
Inversión automática
Invierte automáticamente de forma regular
Inversión dual
Aprovecha la volatilidad del mercado
Staking flexible
Gana recompensas con el staking flexible
Préstamo de criptomonedas
0 Fees
Usa tu cripto como garantía y pide otra en préstamo
Centro de préstamos
Centro de préstamos integral
Centro de patrimonio VIP
Planes de aumento patrimonial prémium
Gestión patrimonial privada
Asignación de activos prémium
Quant Fund
Estrategias cuantitativas de alto nivel
Staking
Haz staking de criptomonedas para ganar en productos PoS
Apalancamiento inteligente
New
Apalancamiento sin liquidación
Acuñación de GUSD
Acuña GUSD y gana rentabilidad de RWA
New drone maker partly owned by Trump sons hopes to win Pentagon contracts
NEW YORK (AP) — Among dozens of companies competing for Pentagon contracts to supply attack drones, one stands out.
Powerus is flush with cash and ballooning in size as it buys up rivals and has one other advantage: It is partly owned by President Donald Trump’s two oldest sons.
The Trump family has drawn criticism for expanding its real estate business into foreign countries that are trying to curry favor with the president and for making billions of dollars off cryptocurrency ventures benefiting from his policies. Grabbing less attention are new ownership stakes in federal contractors providing everything from rocket parts and rare earth magnets to AI chips and computer hardware.
“It’s corruption,” said Kathleen Clark, a government ethics expert at Washington University School of Law in St. Louis. “Government decision makers will feel pressure to use contract awards to enrich the president’s family.”
The latest Trump venture is hoping to win some of the $1.1 billion set aside by the Pentagon to build up a U.S. manufacturing base for armed drones now that the Trump administration put a ban on importing them from China.
Powerus says there is no problem with it bidding for government money that could make the president’s sons richer.
“There’s no conflict there. Whatever they’re doing, is what they’re doing,” said co-founder Brett Velicovich, referring to the Trump brothers. “Our focus at the company has nothing to do with politics.”
Asked to comment about potential conflicts, the Trump Organization sent a statement from Eric Trump: “I am incredibly proud to invest in companies I believe in. Drones are clearly the wave of the future.”
Founded by U.S. Army Special Operations veterans about a year ago, Powerus makes drones mostly for commercial uses, from spreading fertilizer to putting out forest fires. But it is bulking up fast to supply the Defense Department with armed drones like the ones being used by Ukraine and Russia and, more recently, Iran as it rains havoc on Gulf states allied with the U.S.
The company bought three rivals in the past six months and plans to buy more. It just raised $60 million from investors to fund the buying spree and hopes to tap additional financing by doing a “reverse merger” in which a private company gets a public listing by buying one already on the stock market, usually a business with little or no operations.
The public company in this case is Aureus Greenway Holdings, a Florida firm partly owned by Eric and Don Jr. that holds a few golf courses and is listed on the Nasdaq stock exchange.
Of the two oldest brothers, Don Jr., is the one most involved in federal contracting firms through a venture capital fund called 1789 Capital.
Shortly after Trump’s reelection, 1789 Capital made Don Jr. a partner and then went on a buying spree of its own, investing in 25 companies in one year. It had made only six purchases in the two years prior, according to data provided by research firm Pitchbook. Most of its targets appear to be seeking federal contracts or taxpayer funds or have already won them
Don Jr. and his brother have also started their own investment firm to buy stakes in U.S. companies designed to help their father revive America’s manufacturing base. After The Associated Press asked Trump’s chief business lawyer about language in a regulatory filing stating the firm would target companies seeking federal grants, he filed a new document with that language removed.
Don Jr. appears well-equipped to help Powerus. He has spoken out about the need for armed drones, appears knowledgeable about the technology and publicly endorsed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth when he was coming under fire during his confirmation hearings.
Asked why Powerus picked a Trump company to merge with instead of the hundreds of others on Nasdaq with little or no operations, co-founder Velocovich said he was not a finance specialist and didn’t know.
“Our focus is 100% on getting the right technology in the hands of the warfighter,” he said, “regardless of who the investors are.”