- WLFI holders received $4M in USD1 via an airdrop, with each wallet getting $47.
- World Liberty Financial may soon allow WLFI to become tradable after a governance vote.
- USD1 stablecoin gains traction post-airdrop, now listed on Binance and gaining institutional attention.
World Liberty Financial, the Trump-associated crypto initiative, just followed through on its airdrop promise—sending $4 million worth of USD1 stablecoin to WLFI token holders. On-chain stats show each eligible wallet received about $47 USD1, totaling over 85,000 participants. The distribution went off without a hitch, with no messy claims or delays.
This move was built on earlier plans from April, where WLFI teased an airdrop to drum up attention for its USD1 stablecoin. After the proposal got the green light in May, the distribution rolled out in early June. The whole thing ran on Ethereum, although holders in New York and some regions were excluded due to regulatory restrictions.
USD1 Gains Momentum as WLFI Eyes Tradability
USD1 is finally hitting its stride after a sluggish debut, now even landing a spot on Binance. Institutional interest and a bullish Ethereum market seem to be fueling the stablecoin’s rise. With this growing traction, World Liberty Financial might be prepping to open WLFI trading.
So far, WLFI tokens have been locked to governance use only—no trading, no transfers. But the airdrop post hinted at change, floating the idea of a tradability vote. If that happens, community approval seems likely. Still, if they stick to the original whitepaper, WLFI may not be tradable until 2026.
Community Vote Could Fast-Track WLFI Trading
Currently, the only way to engage with WLFI is through governance. But pressure is mounting from the community to flip the switch and enable trading. The recent airdrop success has only added fuel to that fire, and World Liberty Financial appears to be seriously considering it.
In the meantime, WLFI holdings have shot past $100 million, partly due to a fresh deal with Pakistan. However, scrutiny from U.S. critics is rising, questioning the legitimacy and regulatory footing of the Trump-branded crypto venture.