Trump Media Follows Trend of High-Profile Companies Leaving Delaware, Reincorporates in Florida

Shareholders approved move to Sarasota-based company’s home state, aligning rules with Florida as more firms exit Delaware over legal and cost concerns.
Trump Media Follows Trend of High-Profile Companies Leaving Delaware, Reincorporates in Florida
A phone screen displays the Truth Social app in Washington in a file photo. Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images
Chase Smith
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Trump Media and Technology Group (TMTG), parent of the social-media platform Truth Social, has dropped Delaware as its legal home and re-domiciled in Florida after shareholders backed the change at the company’s annual meeting on April 29. The switch became effective on April 30, the company said in a news release issued Thursday.

“We’re thrilled to reincorporate our company in Florida,” CEO and chairman of TMTG Devin Nunes said in the statement. “With its pro-business orientation and respect for the rule of law, Florida is a great place for Trump Media to officially call home.” The company’s operations are already based in Sarasota.
Alongside Truth Social, Trump Media is building a family-focused streaming service, Truth+, and a fintech arm branded Truth.Fi. A shareholder letter released two days before the vote repeated the firm’s goal of providing what it calls a safe harbor for free expression online.
In March, TMTG became the first company to list on the newly launched New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Texas. The company maintained its primary listing on the Nasdaq under the ticker “DJT.” Its shares now also trade on NYSE Texas with the same symbol.

The move adds to a growing list of high-profile exits from Delaware’s once-dominant corporate registry. Last year, Tesla shareholders voted by an 84 percent margin to move the electric-car maker’s charter to Texas after a Delaware Chancery Court judge voided Elon Musk’s $56 billion pay package.

Latin American e-commerce leader MercadoLibre took a similar step on April 28, asking investors to approve a relocation to Texas because, it said, Delaware’s flexible legal standards create “less predictability for an innovative company.”

In February, billionaire investor Bill Ackman said he would reincorporate his Pershing Square management company in Nevada, noting that top law firms increasingly recommend Nevada and Texas over Delaware.

Dropbox and other firms have also signaled they may leave, while Meta Platforms has reportedly discussed a switch, prompting Delaware lawmakers to draft a bill that would curtail some investor lawsuits in an effort to keep companies from bolting.

For Trump Media, a Delaware judge ruled last September that it breached an agreement with Orlando, Florida-based ARC Global and must issue more than 500,000 additional shares before insider lockups expire.

Reincorporation does not affect the location of Trump Media’s headquarters, which was already in Florida, but it does bring the company’s governing law in line with Florida, whose statutes offer directors more explicit shields and carry lower annual fees than Delaware. The share exchange occurred on a one-for-one basis, requiring no action from investors, the company said.

Reuters contributed to this report. 
Chase Smith
Chase Smith
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Chase is an award-winning journalist. He covers national news for The Epoch Times and is based out of Tennessee. For news tips, send Chase an email at [email protected] or connect with him on X.
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