Charts
DataOn-chain
VIP
Market Cap
API
Rankings
CoinOSNew
CoinClaw🦞
Language
  • 简体中文
  • 繁体中文
  • English
Leader in global market data applications, committed to providing valuable information more efficiently.

Features

  • Real-time Data
  • Special Features
  • AI Grid

Services

  • News
  • Open Data(API)
  • Institutional Services

Downloads

  • Desktop
  • Android
  • iOS

Contact Us

  • Chat Room
  • Business Email
  • Official Email
  • Official Verification

Join Community

  • Telegram
  • Twitter
  • Discord

© Copyright 2013-2026. All rights reserved.

简体繁體English
|Legacy

The reality behind WLFI in satirical literature

CN
Techub News
Follow
7 hours ago
AI summarizes in 5 seconds.

Authored by: @BlazingKevin_, Blockbooster Researcher

This article will structurally analyze the actual risks of WLFI along six analytical clues.

On April 11, 2026, a series of lengthy tweets from Peter Girnus (@gothburz) on platform X garnered widespread attention. The tweets, from a first-person perspective, systematically revealed the interest structure between World Liberty Financial (WLFI) and the Trump family, regulatory arbitrage paths, and potential market manipulation behaviors. Two days later, the same author recounted, as an ordinary investor, his experience of investing $32,000 in emergency funds, only to have the tokens immediately locked.

While reading the above, one background information cannot be overlooked: Peter Girnus is a blogger known for his satirical creations, whose typical method is to use public financial documents as material, fabricating the identity of a core insider for a "self-explosive" literary narrative. He is not a real WLFI insider, and the details in his writings are a literary reconfiguration of public information.

This identity statement itself does not diminish the reference value of the tweet content. The core data, document terms, and timelines cited in the tweets can be independently verified through congressional reports, on-chain data, and mainstream media coverage. We will separate this verified information from the literary narrative and structurally analyze the actual risks of WLFI along six analytical clues.

1. Revenue Distribution Mechanism: Unidirectional Extraction Model

The core controversy of WLFI lies not in technology but in its revenue distribution structure.

According to the explicit provisions on page 14 of WLFI's "Golden White Paper," 75% of the project's net income will flow to DT Marks DEFI LLC—a limited liability company registered in Delaware, directly associated with the Trump family. The remaining 25% is retained for project operations. This clause is presented in standard contractual language in the white paper, but its essence is that the project's largest beneficiary has neither capital investment in nor any legal responsibility for the project itself.

A staff report released by House Democrats on November 24, 2025, referred to this structure as "an unprecedented scale of presidential self-dealing." The report indicates that the Trump family has obtained at least $890 million in income from WLFI-related businesses and holds approximately $3.8 billion worth of WLF tokens, without any corresponding traceable capital injection.

The token distribution likewise exhibits a highly concentrated characteristic. According to public disclosures, up to 80% of the token supply flows to the internal entities CIC Digital LLC and Fight Fight Fight LLC. The proportion of tokens held by external investors is low and comes with lock-up restrictions, leaving liquidity almost non-existent.

The team composition also confirms the closed nature of this structure: Among the 12 core members listed on WLFI's official website, 4 have the last name Trump and 3 have the last name Witkoff. Co-founder Steven Witkoff also serves as the U.S. presidential envoy to the Middle East, while his two sons Zach and Alex are respectively responsible for cryptocurrency business operations and a co-founder position.

This "zero investment, high extraction, zero responsibility" structure is the core feature that distinguishes WLFI from typical cryptocurrency projects and is a main focus of congressional investigations.

2. Regulatory Arbitrage Paths: Pardon, Withdrawals, and Investment Timelines

The second line of controversy for WLFI is the temporal correlation between multiple pardons or regulatory actions and external investments. The following events can be independently verified.

The Sun Yuchen Case: Sun Yuchen invested $75 million in WLFI in 2024 while facing SEC charges for fraud, wash trading, and undisclosed celebrity endorsements. In 2025, the SEC settled for $10 million and withdrew the case, after which Sun Yuchen appeared on the WLFI advisory list.

However, this relationship reversed in September 2025. WLFI blacklisted Sun Yuchen's wallet, which held 595 million WLFI tokens (valued at approximately $107 million), citing phishing attack prevention. In April 2026, Sun Yuchen publicly accused WLFI of treating users as "private ATMs," claiming that the blacklisting function was a "backdoor" embedded in the smart contract. This incident revealed the highly centralized control of WLFI's core contract layer.

The Zhao Changpeng and Binance Case: Zhao Changpeng was pardoned after admitting to violating federal money laundering regulations. Shortly thereafter, the SEC dropped its lawsuit against Binance. Binance then used the USD1 stablecoin issued by WLFI to complete a $2 billion settlement transaction.

The BitMEX Executive Case: Arthur Hayes, Benjamin Delo, and Samuel Reed were pardoned after admitting to violating the Bank Secrecy Act, with their company's $100 million fine simultaneously waived.

Each of these three groups of events can be explained within the legal and administrative process separately. However, they overlap temporally with WLFI's business interests, and their correlation warrants further scrutiny. For observers inclined toward an "isolated event" interpretation, the congressional investigation has not reached a final conclusion; for analysts inclined towards a "structural correlation" interpretation, the existing timeline provides some support.

3. Foreign Capital Infiltration: Abu Dhabi Investment and Chip Export Approval

In early 2026, The Wall Street Journal reported on a transaction in which a sovereign background investor from Abu Dhabi purchased a 49% stake in WLFI for $500 million. This transaction included a $187 million upfront payment to a Trump family entity, with the agreement signed by Eric Trump on behalf of the family.

What raised national security concerns were the policy changes before and after this investment. Shortly after the transaction was completed, the U.S. government overturned its previously stated objections based on national security reviews and approved the export of advanced semiconductor products (including Nvidia AI chips) to the aforementioned Abu Dhabi-associated entity.

Senator Chris Murphy and others publicly questioned this, arguing that it constituted a direct exchange of national security assets for family business interests. The White House did not respond directly to this.

The analytical difficulty of this event lies in information asymmetry: the transaction details have not been fully disclosed officially, and the internal considerations during the policy approval process are also opaque. However, structurally speaking, the simultaneous occurrence of external capital, family benefits, and federal policy adjustments within the same timeframe constitutes a substantial conflict of interest hazard.

4. Sanction Compliance Risks: AB DAO Cooperation Incident

On October 14, 2025, the U.S. government imposed sanctions on the Prince Group of Cambodia, citing its alleged involvement in transnational criminal activities.

Twenty-nine days after the sanctions were implemented, on November 12, WLFI announced a partnership with AB DAO. Investigations revealed that AB DAO had affiliations with the Prince Group.

The project party subsequently explained this with "unawareness." After inquiries from reporters regarding this matter, the stablecoin balance held by AB DAO on the WLFI platform plummeted from $10 million to $3.6 million, with approximately $6.4 million unaccounted for; the project party did not provide an explanation for this.

Whether this incident was due to compliance negligence or involved subjective factors, the result is: a project applying for a U.S. banking license established a business partnership with a sanctioned entity a month after U.S. government sanctions were implemented, and subsequently lacked sufficient public explanations. This is an undeniable red flag in compliance assessment.

5. Market Manipulation Suspicion: Policy Timing and Prediction Markets

Tariff Event (April 9, 2025): The president tweeted on Truth Social, "Now is a good time to buy," and hours later announced the suspension of tariffs for 90 days, leading to a subsequent rise of approximately 12% in the Nasdaq index. Reuters reported that before the official announcement, there were millions of dollars in abnormal positions in the options market.

Iran Event (March 23, 2026): After the president stated he would attack Iranian power stations, oil prices rose. The following morning at 6:49 AM, just 15 minutes before the president announced "negotiation progress is going well, strike postponed," there was a market buy order for $580 million in oil futures (about 6,200 contracts, nine times the daily average). Oil prices subsequently fell, and the Dow Jones index rose approximately 1,000 points in a single day, with estimated profits for the involved positions ranging from $40 to $50 million.

In terms of prediction markets: On Polymarket, traders bets with a 93% success rate on the absence of publicly announced military actions, profiting nearly a million dollars; eight accounts accurately predicted the point of ceasefire in Iran. The Guardian described these accounts as showing "signs of insider knowledge." Donald Trump Jr. simultaneously serves as a member of the advisory council for Polymarket and a paid strategic advisor for its competitor Kalshi, while his father's undisclosed military decisions are precisely the highest profit stakes on both platforms.

On April 10, 2026, the White House sent an internal email to all staff, warning against trading based on confidential information. During the same period, an SEC chief enforcement officer resigned due to differences with the chairman on the investigation of cases involving the president's inner circle, and related investigations subsequently stalled.

The common feature of these events is the precise temporal matching between policy actions and market positions. No judicial institution has publicly released formal investigative conclusions yet, but the data itself has already attracted regulatory attention.

6. Dolomite Lending Incident: Direct Manifestation of Governance Risks

In April 2026, all the aforementioned macro-level controversies erupted in the market sentiment through a specific on-chain operation.

According to reports from Gizmodo and CoinDesk, WLFI's treasury deposited 5 billion of its own issued WLFI governance tokens into the affiliated DeFi lending platform Dolomite, using this as collateral to borrow approximately $75 million in stablecoins ($65.4 million USD1 and $10.3 million USDC).

This operation led to Dolomite's USD1 liquidity pool utilization reaching 100%, temporarily preventing third-party depositors from withdrawing. Notably, Dolomite co-founder Corey Caplan also serves as WLFI's chief technology officer, and the Dolomite platform specifically raised the WLFI supply cap to 5.1 billion to accommodate this deposit.

This structure has two core issues:

First, using its own issued governance tokens, which lack secondary market liquidity, as collateral to borrow hard currency stablecoins is a maneuver that shifts token price risk onto the lending platform and its users. Once a price drop in collateral triggers liquidation, the illiquid WLFI tokens would face a risk of spiral collapse, potentially leaving significant bad debts.

Second, there is a clear related-party relationship between the borrower and the lending platform, and this relationship was not adequately disclosed before the operation occurred.

Under market pressure, the price of WLFI tokens dropped nearly 20%, hitting a historical low. The project party later repaid $25 million of the USD1 loan, restoring Dolomite's available liquidity to $35 million, with the deposit interest rate falling from a crisis rate of 34% to 10.43%.

Partial repayment alleviated the immediate liquidity risk, but did not answer the core question: why was this borrowing conducted? Where did the funds flow? The project party has not released a detailed official explanation to date. This lack of transparency at the operational level is one of the main drivers of the current decline in market confidence.

7. The Situation of Ordinary Investors

The above macro structures and on-chain operations ultimately affect ordinary investors through the token lock-up mechanism.

Participating in the WLFI token sale requires investors to qualify as "accredited investors," meaning a net worth over $1 million or an annual income exceeding $200,000. However, this qualification verification relies on investors’ self-declarations, lacking substantive verification mechanisms. In other words, this threshold has some significance for regulatory compliance but has almost no binding force on actual entry control.

Tokens purchased immediately enter a lock-up period, and currently about 80% of external investors’ holdings remain non-circulating, with no secondary market outlet. The project party has offered a "governance voting" mechanism as compensation, but on-chain data shows that 76% of the voting rights are concentrated in the ten largest wallets, rendering ordinary holders’ voting power virtually negligible.

In contrast, the project party simultaneously used $65 million to repurchase tokens at an average price of $0.15 (about 10 times the early sale price), but these funds did not flow back to ordinary holders in any form.

8. Product Evolution: From Governance Tokens to Stablecoins

From a timeline perspective, WLFI's product layout has completed three phases of transition in 17 months:

- October 2024: Issued governance token WLFI, completing a $550 million financing.

- January 2025: Launched Memecoin, with related tokens causing investors approximately $3.87 billion in losses, while the project party collected about $350 million in transaction fees.

- March 2026: Issued the stablecoin USD1 and used it for a $2 billion settlement transaction between Binance and Abu Dhabi sovereign funds within weeks.

- In January 2026, WLFI applied to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) for a national trust bank license, intending to establish World Liberty Trust Company, with Zach Witkoff as president. If approved, this project will formally enter the core financial regulatory system of the U.S. from the cryptocurrency fringe.

Conclusion

Based on the six analytical clues above, WLFI's risk profile can be divided into two levels:

- Structural Risk: The 75/25 revenue distribution clause, 80% internal concentration of tokens, and multiple overlapping identities between family and regulatory decision-makers form a systematic basis for conflict of interest. Issues at this level do not automatically dissipate due to market improvements or partial repayments.

- Operational Risk: The Dolomite lending incident reveals a lack of basic risk management awareness in the project's financial decision-making, and related-party transactions lack transparent disclosure. Combined with the low liquidity of tokens, such operations pose a potential destructive force to market stability.

Currently, congressional investigations are still ongoing, and WLFI has not provided a complete official explanation regarding the Dolomite lending incident; cryptocurrency risk rating agencies have issued a "D" warning for it.

WLFI's bank license application will transform it from a cryptocurrency project into a federally regulated financial institution. This means stricter compliance reviews are imminent. At that time, each of the aforementioned doubts will face more formal legal and regulatory scrutiny.

免责声明:本文章仅代表作者个人观点,不代表本平台的立场和观点。本文章仅供信息分享,不构成对任何人的任何投资建议。用户与作者之间的任何争议,与本平台无关。如网页中刊载的文章或图片涉及侵权,请提供相关的权利证明和身份证明发送邮件到support@aicoin.com,本平台相关工作人员将会进行核查。

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

Selected Articles by Techub News

21 minutes ago
Individual Growth and Group Migration: Hermes Agent and Rotifer Agent Intelligent Evolution Path Selection
51 minutes ago
The Triangle Dilemma of Crypto Leaders
1 hour ago
Three Driving Forces Behind BTC Exceeding $77K: Short Squeeze, Institutional Narrative, and Regulatory Dawn
View More

Table of Contents

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

Related Articles

avatar
avatarTechub News
21 minutes ago
Individual Growth and Group Migration: Hermes Agent and Rotifer Agent Intelligent Evolution Path Selection
avatar
avatarOdaily星球日报
42 minutes ago
The ceasefire is indefinitely extended; how much longer will the conflict between the U.S. and Iran drag on?
avatar
avatarTechub News
51 minutes ago
The Triangle Dilemma of Crypto Leaders
avatar
avatarMatrixport
1 hour ago
In-depth Review of the Kelp DAO Series of Thefts: The Serious Mismatch Between Risks and Returns in DeFi, Where is the Breakthrough Path for Crypto Asset Management?
avatar
avatarTechub News
1 hour ago
Three Driving Forces Behind BTC Exceeding $77K: Short Squeeze, Institutional Narrative, and Regulatory Dawn
APP
Windows
Mac

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink