Executive Summary
- A bear flag chart formation suggests WLFI could decline approximately 20% to the $0.066 level during April.
- The project borrowed $75 million in stablecoins through Dolomite using illiquid WLFI tokens as backing—on a platform operated by World Liberty Financial’s own CTO.
- Pool utilization surged to 93% after the loan, preventing certain depositors from accessing their stablecoin holdings.
- Justin Sun, who committed a minimum of $75 million to WLFI, publicly claimed the project employed a concealed “blacklisting backdoor” to freeze his 544 million token holdings.
- An impending release of more than 16 billion WLFI tokens threatens significant supply dilution.
World Liberty Financial’s native token faces mounting challenges throughout April 2026. A combination of bearish technical indicators, questionable internal transactions, and an escalating feud with a major investor have created substantial headwinds for WLFI’s market performance.

From a technical perspective, WLFI is developing what market analysts identify as a bear flag formation—a continuation pattern typically preceding further downward movement. The measured move from this configuration projects a potential decline to approximately $0.066, representing roughly 20% downside from present levels. Should buyers push prices higher instead, initial overhead resistance would emerge at the 20-day exponential moving average of $0.081, followed by the 50-day EMA at $0.085.
The WLFI/USDT pairing displays this pattern prominently on four-hour timeframes, following several weeks of sharp depreciation.
Controversial Lending Strategy Sparks Concerns
Beyond chart technicals, more troubling developments have emerged from blockchain analysis. According to Arkham Intelligence’s on-chain tracking, addresses associated with World Liberty Financial deposited roughly 3 to 5 billion WLFI tokens into Dolomite—a decentralized lending protocol established by the project’s own chief technology officer—to secure approximately $75 million in stablecoin loans, primarily USD1 and USDC.
The WLFI Team is borrowing $150M USDC against $400M WLFI on Dolomite.
The WLFI Team is lending $406.23M of WLFI across 2 wallets. That is 4.99% of the supply, and 97.8% of the WLFI cap on Dolomite.
They are borrowing a total of $150M USDC against their holdings on Dolomite. pic.twitter.com/7dPsDKF73R
— Arkham (@arkham) April 10, 2026
Subsequent transactions moved more than $40 million of these borrowed stablecoins to Coinbase Prime. This activity elevated Dolomite’s pool utilization rate to approximately 93%, effectively preventing other platform users from completely withdrawing their deposited assets.
Observers have characterized this maneuver as “circular” liquidity mining—leveraging the project’s own non-liquid tokens to extract actual capital. Should WLFI experience a significant price correction, forced liquidation of the collateral could dump massive token quantities onto markets while simultaneously trapping lenders in uncollectible debt positions.
THEY PRINTED 5 BILLION OF THEIR OWN TOKENS THEN WITHDREW IT AS USDC$WLFI FEELS LIKE LUNA 2.0 pic.twitter.com/5OWK25YdK7
— Darky (@Darky1k) April 11, 2026
Morten Christensen, who founded airdropalert.com and holds a position in WLFI, commented: “The whole taking a loan on your own token as collateral is tremendously shady.”
High-Profile Investor Publicly Challenges Project
Tron blockchain creator Justin Sun, who allocated at least $75 million toward WLFI and accepted an advisory position, openly challenged the project by alleging it deployed an undisclosed backdoor mechanism to lock his 544 million token holdings. Sun further claimed governance procedures were manipulated and called for complete transparency regarding scheduled token releases.
World Liberty Financial issued a response through X on April 12, stating: “Justin’s favorite move is playing the victim while making baseless allegations to cover up his own misconduct.” The statement concluded: “See you in court pal.”
Sun’s tokens were initially frozen in September 2025, coinciding with the project’s 20% token unlock event. Blockchain analytics firm Bubblemaps confirms these holdings remain frozen currently.
World Liberty has announced buybacks exceeding $65 million worth of WLFI tokens and rejected claims of position exits.
The project indicated plans for a governance referendum on releasing remaining locked tokens, while clarifying that any approved unlock would occur in stages rather than all at once. A proposed distribution of over 16 billion tokens allocated for public participants remains unresolved.
