On Wednesday, Donald Trump filed his personal financial-disclosure forms with the Federal Election Commission, along with several of his fellow candidates, right before the deadline. But unlike his opponents, Trump felt the need to blast the world with a press release bragging about his money. In typical Trump fashion, he used all-caps.

According to a spokesman, “this report was not designed for a man of Mr. Trump’s massive wealth. For instance, they have boxes once a certain number is reached that simply state $50 million or more. Many of these boxes have been checked. As an example, if a building owned by Mr. Trump is worth $1.5 billion, the box is checked ‘$50,000,000 or more.’”

While those are some very clever rhetorical gymnastics—there’s a lot of space between $50 million and $1.5 billion—it’s still rather obvious that Trump’s personal wealth dwarfs his fellow candidates, a fact that the rest of the press release hammers on:

Mr. Trump’s net worth has increased since the more than one year old financial statement produced at his presidential announcement. Real estate values in New York City, San Francisco, Miami and many other places where he owns property have gone up considerably during this period of time. His debt is a very small percentage of value, and at very low interest rates. As of this date, Mr. Trump’s net worth is in excess of TEN BILLION DOLLARS.

No, that last bit was not capitalized on purpose. This is how it was actually formatted when the release was sent out.

The world won’t actually know what Trump filed on his F.E.C. report until they release it to the public later this month, and Forbes estimates that his actual net worth is less than half of TEN BILLION DOLLARS. But it’s likely that Trump will continue using TEN BILLION DOLLARS, repeatedly, until the figure is drilled into America’s collective conscious...TEN BILLION DOLLARS...ness.