Federal investigators are examining two “suspicious money transfers” from a billionaire Russian real estate executive shortly after the June 2016 Trump Tower meeting with a Kremlin-connected lawyer and immediately after Donald Trump’s election, according to a report.

The first transfer happened 11 days after the June 9 meeting between Trump campaign advisers and Natalia Veselnitskaya, who promised she had “dirt” on Hillary Clinton, BuzzFeed News reported on Wednesday.

An offshore company controlled by Aras Agalarov, who has close ties to Russian leader Vladimir Putin and President Trump, wired more than $19.5 million to his account in a New York bank, the report said.

Agalarov was the president’s host when Trump staged the Miss Universe pageant in Moscow in 2013.

The second transfer took place on Nov. 21 — 13 days after the election.

The Agalarov family’s Russian bank account made 19 separate wire transfers to a New Jersey personal checking account belonging to the billionarie’s son, pop singer Emin Agalarov, and two of his friends.

The account, which had been opened in 2012 and had sat dormant since the summer of 2015, received more than $1.2 million between November 2016 and July 2017.

Shortly afterward, the New Jersey account sent money to a company controlled by Irakly “Ike” Kaveladze, a business associate of the Agalarovs who represented the family at the Trump Tower meeting.

Kaveladze also had business connections to Emin Agalarov’s British publicist Rob Goldstone, who first raised the idea of the meeting with Trump’s campaign team.

An attorney representing the Agalarovs and Kaveladze said the transactions were on the up and up.

“I’m actually perplexed why anybody is interested in this or why anybody in their right mind would treat this as suspicious,” Scott Balber told BuzzFeed.

Goldstone’s spokesman called allegations of suspicious activity “ridiculous.”

Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, Donald Trump Jr. and Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, also attended the meeting at the Trump high-rise on Fifth Avenue.

The money transfers were uncovered after law enforcement officials told financial institutions to look through any records they had of people connected to special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe.

The banks made the “suspicious activity reports” to the Treasury Department.

BuzzFeed noted that the “suspicious activity reports” are not evidence of criminal activity and the Agalarovs, Goldstone and Kaveladze have not been charged.

But federal prosecutors have used such reports to convict Manafort.

He was found guilty last month in a federal court in Alexandria, Va., of funneling millions of dollars he was paid by a pro-Russian politician in Ukraine through offshore banks to evade paying US taxes.