I don't dare to buy tokens, is there still a chance for WLFI coin stocks?

CN
2 days ago

Editor's Note: On September 1, World Liberty Financial (WLFI) welcomed the first token application and trading. However, as early as August, WLFI had packaged its tokens as stock and went public through a reverse merger in the U.S. Currently, from a market capitalization perspective, ALT5, as the "WLFI Reserve Stock," is severely undervalued, but will ALT5's stock price be linked to the WLFI token price? And what market trends will the current divergence in WLFI's token price bring?

The author is still observing these questions. The following is an in-depth analysis of the ALT5 stock company, originally published by Rhythm BlockBeats on August 20. Enjoy reading.

In August, among the pile of announcements on Nasdaq, there was a seemingly ordinary financing that exploded like a hidden bomb: ALT5 Sigma issued up to 200 million shares of common stock at $7.50 per share (approximately 10 billion RMB), exchanging shares for WLFI tokens, and brought Eric Trump, the youngest son of Trump, into the board.

Overnight, this financial technology company, which had an annual revenue of only $20 million, transformed into "the Trump family's listed treasury." ALT5 is not just raising funds; it is brazenly pushing the politically charged WLFI family token and its issued USD1 stablecoin into the U.S. securities system.

WLFI (World Liberty Financial) is not merely a startup but a "political mint" crafted by the Trump family.

This company was established two months before the U.S. election, and within a few months, WLFI has already brought hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue to the family business through the stablecoin USD1. In other words, ALT5 is not just accessing a stablecoin but a complete set of political financial weapons.

The question is—Is ALT5 really raising funds, or is it selling a wealth ticket inscribed with "political dividends"?

I. The Hidden Lineage of ALT5: The Interconnection of Three Forces

A company's shareholder list often reveals more than its financial reports.

The shareholder structure of ALT5 is almost a power puzzle: offshore capital, Wall Street funds, and political token factions intertwine, making this company appear both as a fintech enterprise and a political financial experiment.

What truly gives ALT5 a powder keg atmosphere is this type of shareholder: the political token faction. The two representative figures are Zach Witkoff and Eric Trump.

Eric Trump needs no introduction—he is the son of U.S. President Trump, and the family's crypto industry is currently under his jurisdiction, directly entering the ALT5 board.

What deserves more attention is Zach Witkoff—co-founder of the WLFI stablecoin and currently serving as the chairman of ALT5.

If we only look at his resume, Zach Witkoff's background already determines that he will not be an ordinary entrepreneur. He is the son of Steven Witkoff, a well-known real estate developer in New York, who currently serves as the U.S. Special Envoy for Middle East Affairs. The Witkoff family has decades of accumulation in Manhattan's real estate sector, having held numerous landmark buildings, and his father Steven has had years of dealings with New York's financial and political circles.

The Trump family's rise is rooted in real estate, and Steven Witkoff has long-standing connections with the Trump family in the New York real estate scene.

The relationship between Zach and the Trump family can be summarized in one sentence: real estate connections + political ties. Therefore, the relationship between Zach and Eric is not just "cooperation," but a familial political financial alliance.

If Eric Trump puts the family's political resources on the table, then Zach Witkoff is the one executing the financial grounding for the Trump family. He is a key bridge in this intertwining of political and financial interests.

Thus, the existence of these two individuals means that ALT5's development path will become increasingly politicized. It is not just pursuing commercial expansion but is preparing financial tools for the U.S. political cycle from 2025 to 2028. To some extent, it is part of the Trump family's "financial arsenal."

Next, let's take a look at one of ALT5's major shareholders, an offshore company registered in the Bahamas—Clover Crest Bahamas Ltd., holding about 11%. The Bahamas is well-known as a tax haven, where many wealthy individuals and companies register their businesses. The reason is simple: it allows for lenient tax policies while avoiding excessive regulatory scrutiny.

In simpler terms, Clover Crest acts like a hidden channel for the Trump family, allowing money to be quietly funneled into ALT5 while also isolating risks when necessary.

Another source of shareholder power comes from Wall Street fund companies, such as the well-known Vanguard Group. These types of funds may be indirectly held by retail investors globally, as they manage large-scale index funds.

Vanguard's stake in ALT5 is not high and appears to be a passive allocation. However, the issue is that when the public sees a name like "Vanguard Group" on the shareholder list, they instinctively perceive the company as "legitimate" and "reliable." This is what is known as legal endorsement.

These three forces each have different logics: offshore financiers provide hidden funding channels to ensure money flows in; Wall Street funds provide facade and legitimacy to ensure the company appears "compliant"; and the political token faction provides narrative and strategic direction, pushing ALT5 onto the global stablecoin stage.

The combination of these three makes ALT5 both clean and dangerous.

On the surface, it is a rule-abiding fintech company; in reality, it is being used as a stablecoin version of a "Trojan horse," quietly carrying political and capital ambitions under the guise of compliance.

II. The FinTech Facade—Where Does the Hidden Door Lead?

On paper, ALT5 is a perfectly normal fintech company. It holds all the necessary licenses, offering a complete set of services including payment gateways, OTC trading, custody, and white-label exchanges, with an annual revenue of about $20 million and a gross margin close to 50%, making it a top performer in the crypto payment industry. Compliant, transparent, with impressive data, it even appears "cleaner" than many traditional payment companies.

However, what truly propelled ALT5 from a niche tool-based fintech to a global focus was the $1.5 billion financing in August 2025. Overnight, it was no longer just a company providing APIs but was pushed into a completely new position—becoming the "Nasdaq treasury" for the Trump stablecoin WLFI.

This means that ALT5 is no longer just a factory selling technology but has become a key node in the globalization of stablecoins.

Why is it called a "backdoor"? The reasoning is quite simple.

First is the protection of surface identity. If the WLFI stablecoin wants to directly enter the payment networks of various countries, it will almost certainly hit the high walls of central banks and regulators. But ALT5 has existing fintech licenses, allowing it to take the lead as a "payment API service provider." Regulatory agencies see a compliant fintech company rather than a politically charged stablecoin.

Secondly, there is a hidden channel for cross-border settlement. ALT5 Pay's API allows merchants to accept cryptocurrencies like BTC and USDT, which can then be automatically converted into dollars or euros in the background. If WLFI/USD1 is embedded in this process, merchants and users may not even realize they are using a stablecoin backed by the Trump family. On the surface, it is "payment technology," but in reality, it completes the infiltration of stablecoins.

Finally, there is the natural integration with a global network. ALT5 has already connected the Lightning Network and stablecoin payment systems, achieving efficiency far superior to traditional cross-border payments reliant on SWIFT. For many emerging markets with a strong demand for dollars but lacking direct access to Wall Street, ALT5 provides an invisible express lane. Through it, WLFI can quickly "sink" into global trading scenarios with minimal resistance.

In this way, the significance of the $1.5 billion financing becomes clear: it is not just simple expansion capital but more like a strategic deployment to lay the groundwork for WLFI's global payment pipeline.

ALT5 can naturally continue to assure regulators, "We are just a compliant API payment company." But in the shadows, its interfaces may be becoming the tracks for stablecoins to bypass the traditional financial system.

This dual narrative makes ALT5 a typical "fintech facade." Externally, it is clean, transparent, and professional, a textbook example of fintech; internally, it is being pushed to a strategic height, becoming an indispensable piece in the puzzle of stablecoin globalization.

This may be the key to how WLFI can quickly transition from a political concept to a real financial tool: it has found a "legitimate backdoor" like ALT5.

When the compliant facade is thick enough, stablecoins can quietly flow into merchants' and users' daily transactions, and by the time regulators truly react, that door may have already been fully opened.

III. Trump's Shadow Financial Empire

ALT5 is just the tip of the iceberg; the larger landscape beneath is the Trump family's effort to create their own dollar system.

……

For the full content, please visit the 【Rhythm Beating】 public account

免责声明:本文章仅代表作者个人观点,不代表本平台的立场和观点。本文章仅供信息分享,不构成对任何人的任何投资建议。用户与作者之间的任何争议,与本平台无关。如网页中刊载的文章或图片涉及侵权,请提供相关的权利证明和身份证明发送邮件到support@aicoin.com,本平台相关工作人员将会进行核查。

参赛有礼:送你 30 天 VIP + 冲击 25,000 USDT!
Ad
Share To
APP

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink