Trump-linked $WLFI mints billions for the Trump family as UAE cash and Binance deals turbocharge a token structure that leaves many investors underwater.
- $WLFI’s float near $0.11 on Binance implies roughly $2.94B market cap on a 24.66B circulating supply, after raising over $550M for a “stablecoin‑centric” DeFi push.
- A UAE‑backed firm bought 49% of World Liberty Financial for $500M days before Trump’s inauguration, deepening geopolitical and ethics concerns around the family’s crypto wealth.
- Reporting from WSJ, Reuters, CNN, Forbes, and others shows $WLFI’s structure channels outsized upside to Trump‑linked insiders while many late‑stage token buyers shoulder volatility and losses.
Sons of senior Trump administration officials have quietly turned a four–year crypto experiment into a dynastic cash machine, even as many of their own backers are left nursing losses, according to an explosive new report in the Wall Street Journal.
Per the article, World Liberty Financial, a DeFi platform built around the $WLFI token and fronted by Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump alongside developer Zach Witkoff, is now throwing off value at a pace that dwarfs the president’s legacy real‑estate portfolio.
A family project with billions at stake
In the “depths of Donald Trump’s interregnum,” his two eldest sons met at Mar‑a‑Lago with Witkoff and two would‑be crypto founders “to conjure up a new money machine,” according to the Wall Street Journal’s account of the meeting that seeded World Liberty Financial. That venture has already generated “as much as $5 billion in paper wealth” for the Trump family after $WLFI began trading freely, a launch the Journal likened to an IPO for the token.
$WLFI’s tokenomics are now fully on display in public markets. Binance quotes World Liberty Financial at about $0.11 per token, implying a market capitalization near $2.94B on a circulating supply of roughly 24.66 billion $WLFI. The exchange notes the token’s initial sale raised “over $550 million” and that $WLFI aims to be a stablecoin‑centric DeFi ecosystem for dollar‑denominated services.
Foreign money, domestic risk
The capital structure behind that windfall is increasingly geopolitical. An Emirati‑linked investment firm acquired a 49% stake in World Liberty Financial via a $500M deal signed just four days before Trump’s second inauguration, handing a company tied to Abu Dhabi national security adviser Tahnoon bin Zayed, often dubbed the “spy sheikh,” nearly half of the family’s flagship crypto business. “In exchange for half a billion dollars,” investors tied to Abu Dhabi “received 49% in equity in World Liberty Financial,” Fortune reported, calling $WLFI “one of the Trump family’s main crypto businesses.”
Separately, Binance has given the Trump crypto platform a push of its own. At a Dubai conference, Witkoff hailed a partnership with the exchange, saying, “This is just the beginning,” even as Binance’s former leadership seeks leniency after admitting to compliance failures that enabled criminal activity.
Investors’ pain, Trumps’ gain
For smaller $WLFI buyers, outcomes look less spectacular. Reuters previously detailed pitches urging investors to buy at least $20M of “governance tokens” to gain access to the Trump‑branded DeFi project, an offer that concentrated upside inside the family while leaving late‑stage entrants exposed to token volatility. As one Forbes analysis put it, “World Liberty’s token sale revenues have been extraordinarily lucrative for the president and his sons—even before this UAE deal,” underscoring how governance and cash flows were structured to favor insiders.
That divergence—“billions for their families” while “their investors didn’t always fare so well,” as the Journal summarized it—goes to the heart of the political risk now surrounding the president’s crypto empire.
Market backdrop and price action
The Trump family’s token sits inside a broader digital‑asset market that still trades like a leveraged bet on macro risk. Bitcoin (BTC) changes hands near $70,853, with a 24‑hour high around $70,900 and a low near $69,800, on roughly $41.4B in volumes. Ethereum (ETH) trades close to $2,094, up about 0.6% over the last 24 hours, with spot activity concentrated around the $2,050–$2,100 band and more than $3.3B in spot turnover and over $46B in futures volume. Solana (SOL) sits around $86.47, with a 24‑hour peak near $88 and a trough around $84, on roughly $3.5B in trading volume.
For $WLFI itself, Binance data show a live price of about $0.11, 24‑hour trading volume of roughly $174M, and a fully diluted supply capped at 100 billion tokens, embedding enormous theoretical upside for the insiders who seeded it—and matching political scrutiny for a White House now deeply entangled with crypto capital markets.




