Donald Trump silent on World Liberty Financial, team unveils WLFI token

Donald Trump didn’t share any details about World Liberty Financial during its launch event on X, though the team has revealed a token is coming.
Donald Trump didn’t share any details about World Liberty Financial during its launch event on X, though the team has revealed a token is coming.

Donald Trump didn’t end up talking about World Liberty Financial — his family’s new crypto platform — during a so-called launch event on X, but the team eventually shared information about the project’s token.

The former United States president Trump was interviewed by crypto influencer Farokh Sarmad in a Sept. 16 X Space, his first public appearance since an apparent assassination attempt on Sept. 15, which he spoke about to open the livestream.

Despite Trump billing the livestream as a “State of Crypto address,” it took about 16 minutes for him to mention the word, saying: “We’re going to make our country greater than ever before, and you’re going to be happy, and you’re going to love your crypto.”

While Trump spoke for around 45 minutes, he didn’t share any information about World Liberty Financial, details of which have already been sparse.

It wasn’t until over two hours into the livestream that one of the project’s leaders, Zak Folkman, shared that “there will be a token.”

Reading from a prewritten statement, Folkman said it was planning to sell nontransferrable WLFI tokens, which “are pure governance tokens, only providing the right to make proposals and vote on matters related to the platform.”

He added that the sale of WLFI tokens to US persons would only be available to accredited investors.

“Although we don’t consider WLFI to be a security, in the light of regulatory uncertainty surrounding tokens and token sales in general in the United States, we’ve decided that it’s prudent to limit the token sales to certain persons who would be eligible to participate in transactions that are exempt from registration under the US federal securities law,” Folkman said.

“So, that means that US persons may only participate in a potential token sale if they have been reasonably verified as accredited investors.”

He added a potential token sale to non-US persons would similarly be limited by “applicable restrictions.”

Folkman and fellow project leader Chase Herro, along with Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., have touted how the platform would remove barriers that exist in the traditional finance system.

Folkman did not share what WLFI’s total supply would be but said it would have an “incredibly fair token distribution,” with “approximately 63%” set aside for sale to the public.

He added that there had been “no presales” or “early buy-ins with discounted allocation” for venture capitalists. However, 20% of the tokens were allocated to the platform’s team and advisers, with the remaining roughly 17% for user rewards.

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An earlier reported white paper draft suggested that 70% of the WLFI token supply would be held aside for the team, with the remainder allocated for public sale.

No details were shared on the World Liberty Finance platform itself. Reports have said it will be a decentralized finance (DeFi) platform for borrowing and lending similar to Dough Finance, which was hacked for $1.8 million in July.

The white paper draft also mentioned credit systems for borrowing and lending built on the popular DeFi app Aave, which World Liberty Financial said it is “working with.” The project has also said it wants to drive “the mass adoption of stablecoins.”

Trump — who in 2019 said that cryptocurrency’s values are “based on thin air” — has changed his tune and sold four non-fungible token (NFT) collections, accepted crypto for his campaign contributions and cozied up to the crypto industry, promising to be a “crypto president.”

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