Why Did WLFI Drop to an All-Time Low?

WLFI, the native token of the Donald Trump–backed World Liberty Financial platform, fell to a record low on Saturday as concerns emerged over how the project is using its own token as collateral.

The token dropped to around $0.07714, marking an 83% decline from its September peak of $0.46, according to CoinMarketCap data. It was last trading near $0.07879, down 4.66% over the past 24 hours. The decline extends a broader downtrend, with WLFI down 65% over the past year.

The move followed disclosures that wallets linked to World Liberty Financial deployed large amounts of WLFI on Dolomite, a decentralized lending platform co-founded by the project’s chief technology officer, Corey Caplan.

What Triggered Market Concerns?

Onchain data from Arkham shows that a wallet associated with the project deposited roughly 5 billion WLFI tokens as collateral on Dolomite. The position was used to borrow about $75 million in stablecoins, including USD1 and USDC, with more than $40 million later transferred to Coinbase Prime.

The structure has drawn scrutiny from market participants, particularly given WLFI’s limited liquidity relative to its reported fully diluted valuation. A large collateral position tied to a less liquid asset introduces the risk of forced selling if prices fall toward liquidation thresholds.

“WLFI has almost a $10 billion FDV, but it is not an extremely liquid asset,” one user wrote on X. “So imagine what would happen if 5% of WLFI’s total supply would suddenly need to be sold to liquidate the position.”

Another user compared the setup to borrowing against internally generated value, writing that it resembles “the financial equivalent of printing casino chips, borrowing cash against them.”

Investor Takeaway

Using a project’s own token as collateral introduces reflexive risk. If prices fall, liquidation pressure can accelerate declines, especially when liquidity is limited relative to position size.

How Exposed Is the Lending Platform?

Dolomite remains a relatively small player in decentralized finance, ranking 19th among lending platforms by total value locked, according to DefiLlama. That positioning raises additional concerns about its ability to absorb large liquidation events without wider market impact.

If WLFI’s price approaches liquidation levels, lenders on the platform could face rapid collateral sales into a thin market. The concentration of collateral in a single asset increases the sensitivity of the system to price volatility.

Such setups are not uncommon in decentralized finance, but they rely heavily on liquidity depth and risk management parameters. In cases where those conditions are insufficient, liquidation cascades can emerge quickly.

How Is World Liberty Responding?

World Liberty Financial acknowledged the lending activity and said its positions remain well above liquidation thresholds. The project described itself as an “anchor borrower” and argued that the strategy is intended to generate yield for users.

“Everyday users are earning outsized stablecoin yields right now — at a time when traditional markets are offering very little. That’s the whole point,” the project said in a statement on X.

Separately, the project indicated it plans to introduce a governance proposal to implement a phased unlock schedule for WLFI tokens held by early retail buyers. The proposal would replace immediate access with a longer-term vesting structure, subject to community approval.

The proposed change could affect circulating supply dynamics, though it does not directly address concerns around the current collateral structure and its potential market impact.