Trump AI czar Sacks calls California wealth tax an asset seizure and 'scary direction' for U.S.

C

CNBC Finance

Jan 21, 2026

2 min read

Download Gold Price Tracker & Alerts

Get the app to explore more features and stay updated

Key Points
  • President Donald Trump's AI and crypto czar David Sacks attacked California's proposed wealth tax on billionaires.
  • The Billionaire Tax Act proposes a one-time 5% tax on the total wealth of California residents with $1 billion or more in net worth.
  • Despite the tax, billionaire CEOs such as Nvidia's Jensen Huang and Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky said they intend to stay in California.

President Donald Trump's artificial intelligence and crypto czar David Sacks on Wednesday criticized California's proposed wealth tax on billionaires, calling it a "scary direction" for the U.S.

"This is this is not a tax, this is an asset seizure," the venture capitalist told CNBC's "Squawk Box" from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

"Never been anything like this before in American history," he added.

The Billionaire Tax Act, which is currently collecting signatures to be added to the November ballot in California, proposes a one-time 5% tax on the total wealth of residents with $1 billion or more in net worth. The tax would apply to California residents as of Jan. 1, 2026.

Sacks insisted that "it's not a one-time, it's a first time."

"And if they get away with it, there'll be a second time and a third time. And this will be the beginning of something new and different in this country, which is asset seizure," he said.

Sacks, who has relocated to Texas after three decades in California, believes the legislation has a "good chance" of passing and could set a precedent for similar bills in other states.

He called out Gov. Gavin Newsom for his delayed opposition to the bill, which he argued has caused a trillion dollars of net worth to leave the state and put a "huge hole" in tax collections.

Despite the tax, CEOs like Nvidia's Jensen Huang and OpenAI's Sam Altman have indicated plans to stay in the state. Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky also told CNBC this month that he'll remain in California.

But Sacks said smaller businesses in California are more flexible and opting to leave.

"They've got large companies in the state, and California's network effect is powerful," he said of large businesses like Nvidia. "That's why progressives think they can get away with this."

Published

January 21, 2026

Wednesday at 2:05 PM

Reading Time

2 minutes

~364 words

More Articles

Explore other insights and stories

Jan 21, 2026 CNBC Finance

Trump calls for Congress to enact 10% credit card interest rate cap; bank stocks rise

The episode may show the limits of President Trump's ability to cajole the financial industry into voluntarily giving up billions of dollars in revenue.

Read Article
Jan 21, 2026 CNBC Finance

European lawmakers suspend U.S. trade deal amid Greenland tariff tensions

EU lawmakers have suspended the approval of the U.S.-EU trade agreement over President Trump's Greenland-related tariff threats.

Read Article
Jan 21, 2026 CNBC Finance

Pending home sales drop sharply in December, dampening 2026 outlook

There were just 1.18 million homes on the market in December, down 9% from November, and matching the lowest inventory level of 2025.

Read Article