Three things happened when World Liberty Financial borrowed $75 million last week. The collateral was 5 billion of its own WLFI token. The lender was a platform advised by someone who works for World Liberty. And investors immediately got nervous.
It's like asking your business partner's roommate for a loan, then pledging your own company stock as collateral.
The Messy Details
World Liberty Financial pledged WLFI tokens on Dolomite and received $65.4 million in USD1 stablecoin plus $10.3 million in USDC. The conflict: Dolomite co-founder Corey Caplan also advises World Liberty Financial.
The company later repaid $15 million - a partial retreat that signals the deal wasn't working as planned. Meanwhile, WLFI crashed 12% to a record low, erasing $427 million in market value.
On paper, the collateral was worth around $440 million. But the token trades so thinly that real selling pressure would evaporate that number instantly.
Why Depositors Are Stuck
The USD1 pool on Dolomite surged past 93% utilization - the danger zone. Regular depositors who want their money back are now waiting in line.
World Liberty is borrowing its own stablecoin from an insider-advised platform using its own token as collateral. The team dismissed concerns as "FUD" (fear, uncertainty, doubt) - which is what people say when they don't want to answer harder questions.
What to Watch
Whether World Liberty fully repays the remaining $60 million tells you everything about how real this venture is. Track WLFI token volume closely - thin trading during a crisis is where wealth disappears.
