Treasury Secretary Bessent says he has divested his soybean farm

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent divests farmland and assets worth millions to comply with ethics agreement after concerns over potential conflicts of interest. - REUTERS/Filepic
WASHINGTON: U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, a key figure in implementing President Donald Trump's economic agenda including tariffs, disclosed on Sunday that he has recently divested his interests in a soybean farm to comply with the ethics agreement he signed last January when he joined the administration.
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- US ethics office flagged Bessent for not meeting divestiture terms aimed at preventing conflicts of interest.
- Bessent sold soybean and corn farmland worth up to US$25M, previously earning US$1M annually in rental income.
- He pledged to complete remaining asset divestitures by year-end, after mostly meeting April 2025 deadlines.
"I'm involved in the agricultural industry. I run a soybean farm," Bessent initially told CBS' "Face the Nation" program while discussing the U.S. trade situation for U.S. farmers. He quickly added: "I actually just divested it this week as part of my ethics agreement. So I'm out of that business."
The New York Times has reported that Bessent owned as much as US$25 million of soybean and corn farmland in North Dakota, including thousands of acres that earned him as much as US$1 million a year in rental income.
As part of his ethics agreement, Bessent pledged to divest his Key Square Group hedge fund and other assets to avoid conflicts of interest. Many of the divestitures were to be completed by April 28, 2025.
In an August statement issued by the Treasury Department, Bessent said he had completed all but 4% of the asset divestitures required by his ethics agreement and intended to divest the remaining assets by the end of the year.
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