Donald Trump has loaned $50 million to his presidential campaign, which he claimed last week he had forgiven, making the figure a contribution. | Getty SEC filing: Trump reported net worth of $4.2 billion in 2011

A 2012 Securities and Exchange Commission filing has further called into question Donald Trump's oft-repeated claim that he’s worth more than $10 billion.

According to a statement filed by Wells Fargo Securities in 2012, first reported by The Guardian, the presumptive Republican nominee in 2011 reported "a net worth in excess of $4.2 billion and liquidity in excess of $250 million."


The 132-page filing on securitization of mortgages on Trump Tower and other properties included the following statement: “The sponsor is Donald J Trump. Mr Trump has significant commercial real estate holdings worldwide including interests in office, retail, residential, golf-clubs and hospitality properties in markets including New York, San Francisco, Florida, Washington DC, and Scotland. As of 30 June 2011, Mr Trump reports a net worth in excess of $4.2bn and liquidity in excess of $250m.”

A Wells Fargo spokesman told the U.K.-based publication that the filing was accurate. The newspaper said the Trump campaign did not respond to calls to comment.

After filing his second annual financial disclosure, a 104-page document, with the Federal Election Commission in May, Trump bragged about how his filing was “the largest in the history of the FEC.”

“I have built an incredible company and have accumulated one of the greatest portfolios of real estate assets, many of which are considered to be among the finest and most iconic properties in the world,” he said at the time.

Trump has loaned $50 million to his presidential campaign, which he claimed last week he had forgiven, making the figure a contribution. That came after his campaign reported having only $1.3 million in cash on hand at the start of June. He made self-funding his campaign a key pledge throughout the Republican primary process.

The campaign of Trump's all-but-certain general election opponent, Hillary Clinton, has called him out as an "alleged billionaire."