Donald Trump Jr. called claims that his family is profiting from his father being in the White House “nonsense” as he toured India to pitch potential buyers for Trump-brand luxury homes.

In fact, Donald Jr. said his family is actually losing money on new business deals because his father vowed to stop conducting business overseas while he’s in office to avoid potential conflicts.

When critics talk about “profiteering from the presidency and all this nonsense” they forget about “the opportunity cost of the deals that we were not able to do.”

“It’s sort of a shame. Because we put on all these impositions on ourselves and essentially got no credit for actually doing that … for doing the right thing,” he ​told CNBC-TV18 in India, The Associated Press reported on Wednesday​.

​Donald Jr., who runs the Trump Organization with his younger brother Eric, landed in India on Tuesday for a business trip that ​was promoted by glossy advertisements on the front-pages of major newspapers in India with the question: “Trump has arrived. Have you?”

​The ads promised buyers who order apartments in the Trump properties in the suburb of the Indian capital by Thursday the opportunity to get a “conversation and dinner” with Donald Jr. the next day.

The Trump Organization and its Indian business partners have a licensing agreement in which the companies build the developments and pay Trump a fee for use of the name.

One complex in Pune is already open and other real estate projects are in varying stages of construction in Mumbai, Kolkata and Gurgaon, a suburb of New Delhi.

The 254 residences in the Gurgaon project cost as much as $1.6 million.

All of the deals were inked before President Trump took office, but that still has some questioning the appearance of a conflict of interest.

“The president should be putting the public’s interest before his business interests. That can’t happen if his son is flying around the world trying to trade on the fact that his father is sitting in the Oval Office,” Scott H. Amey, general counsel for the non-partisan Project on Government Oversight in Washington​, told The Associated Press​.