Treasury says Trump Account investment options will include State Street, BlackRock and Vanguard ETFs
The Treasury Department said the investment lineup for Trump Accounts includes ETFs from State Street, BlackRock and Vanguard..
VERDICT — CONFIRMED

The US Treasury Department said the investment lineup for Trump Accounts will include exchange-traded funds from State Street, BlackRock and Vanguard, per a 2 July MarketWatch bulletin.
MarketWatch's top-stories coverage framed the announcement as answering where families can invest Trump Account money, saying the Treasury Department “just answered that question.” CNBC also reported on 2 July that the Trump Account investment picks are State Street, BlackRock and Vanguard ETFs.
On the record: the Treasury Department named the three fund providers — State Street, BlackRock and Vanguard — per MarketWatch and CNBC. Not specified in the available material: which specific ETFs made the lineup, fee arrangements, contribution mechanics, or when the accounts open for investment. The underlying Treasury release and the MarketWatch bulletin itself could not be reviewed directly.
Background
Trump Accounts are the child investment accounts created under the sweeping tax-and-spending law enacted in 2025. The design gives eligible newborns a federally seeded starting balance of $1,000, with families able to make further contributions into a tax-advantaged account invested in low-cost funds tracking the stock market — a structure intended to give every child a market-linked nest egg from birth. The Treasury Department was left to fill in much of the operational detail, including which investment products qualify.
The three named managers are the giants of American index investing: BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street are the world's largest ETF and index-fund providers, together managing tens of trillions of dollars and anchoring the low-cost fund market the accounts are built around. For the firms, inclusion in a federally established account program offers a channel to a generation of new investors at population scale, which is why the selection itself is commercially consequential even before specific funds are named.
What comes next
The gaps the Treasury has yet to fill publicly are the operative ones: the specific ETFs on the menu, the fee arrangements attached to them, contribution mechanics, and the date the accounts open for investment. Watch for the underlying Treasury guidance setting those terms, and for the named managers detailing which of their funds qualify.
