

World Liberty Financial (WLFI), the Trump family’s crypto
project, is planning to release a stablecoin, raising concern over
the US president’s exposure to the digital asset industry.
The project released a memecoin immediately prior to President
Donald Trump’s inauguration, the price of which skyrocketed and
crashed soon after, causing many to accuse WLFI of a
pump-and-dump scheme.
WLFI has also made multimillion-dollar purchases of crypto
tokens immediately prior to important crypto-related events the
president has attended or announcements influencing the industry.
WLFI purchased $20
million of various tokens ahead of the March 7 White House
Crypto Summit.
As World Liberty Financial’s portfolio grows and regulator
oversight disappears from the crypto industry, observers and legal
scholars are becoming increasingly concerned over conflicts of
interest within the Trump administration.
Son Eric Trump pumps his father’s memecoin ahead of the
inauguration. Source: Eric
Trump
Trump’s stablecoin USD1 riddled with liabilities
WLFI announced on
March 25 that it will launch the new stablecoin USD1, “100% backed
by short-term US government treasuries, US dollar deposits, and
other cash equivalents.”
WLFI co-founder Zach Witkoff said in the announcement that the
coin can be used for “seamless, secure cross-border
transactions.”
News of USD1’s forthcoming release came just days after WLFI
secured more than
$500 million through the sale of its own $WLFI
tokens.
Observers have already begun to raise the alarm about the
possible security risks posed by a stablecoin connected to the
president. There are also concerns over the possibility of market
manipulation and violations of the emoluments clause of the US
Constitution — a section of the document that protects against
undue influence over American leaders.
As regards the latter, cyber and digital media attorney Andrew
Rossow told Cointelegraph that the stablecoin is “a direct affront
to constitutional safeguards meant to prevent conflicts of
interest.”
“With Trump and his family controlling 60% of World Liberty’s
equity interests, the USD1 stablecoin could facilitate indirect
financial gains or undue foreign influence over US policy,
particularly if foreign entities invest in or use the
stablecoin.”
WLFI makes up a sizeable chuck of Trump’s estimated net
worth. Source:
Fortune
Corey Frayer, who worked on crypto policy at the SEC under
former President Joe Biden, said that the project’s emphasis on
cross-border payments was particularly worrisome and that foreign
entities may invest as a way to gain favor with Trump.
“There’s a lot of opacity around this marketplace, and prior
relationships with illicit finance,” Frayer
told The New
York Times.
US policymakers have already noted the possibility for foreign
influence following the launch of Trump’s eponymous memecoin in
January.
At the time, Democratic Representative Maxine Waters — a top
Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee —
wrote that
“Anyone globally, even individuals who have been sanctioned by the
U.S. or banned from our capital markets, can now trade and profit
off of $TRUMP through various unregulated platforms.”
Related:
Congress repealed the IRS broker rule, but can it
regulate DeFi?
In addition to potential foreign influence, observers are
concerned that Trump’s crypto ventures could threaten market
stability and integrity, and open up global markets to
manipulation.
Referencing USD1, Heath Mayo — the founder of the
Trump-alternative conservative movement Principles First —
said that a sitting
president issuing an instrument backed by public debt should be
illegal, adding that the project had “terrible incentives and
corrupt use of US taxpayer credit.”
Rossow said that the president’s role in a stablecoin project
while at the same time working to craft stablecoin legislation in
the form of the GENIUS Act is “a constitutional violation that
could destabilize regulatory integrity.”
Trump’s influence over the industry and ability to drop
enforcement actions against crypto executives who support him
creates “an uneven playing field, disadvantaging competitors and
violating principles of equal protection under the law.”
What options do regulators have regarding Trump’s crypto
conflicts of interest
Trump, who has long stated an affinity with former President
Andrew Jackson, seems to be holding to the
latter’s strategy of acknowledging judicial rulings — and then
doing what he wants regardless.
The presidential administration has already shown that it is
willing to defy orders from federal judges when, earlier this
month, it ignored a
verbal order from a federal judge to turn around two planes full of
alleged gang members bound for the Terrorism Confinement Center in
El Salvador.
Regarding crypto, Senator Elizabeth Warren has already
called for an
ethics probe into Trump’s crypto activities. She said that the
president’s memecoin “massively enriched Trump personally, enabled
a mechanism for the crypto industry to funnel cash to him, and
created a volatile financial asset that allows anyone in the world
to financially speculate on Trump’s political fortunes.”
Warren, a long-time crypto critic, has taken aim at WLFI.
Source: Senate
Banking Committee
The probe, if it had a chance to begin with, doesn’t appear to
have gone anywhere, and Congressional Republicans are busy working
on the GENIUS Act, which even has the support of a handful of
Democrats.
What, if anything, can be done?
Rossow said that, despite changes in SEC leadership, other
agencies like the Financial Crime Enforcement Network could still
pursue investigations.
He also noted that state-level action from local regulators and
Attorneys General is “not just possible but imperative, especially
in states with robust consumer protection laws.
He added that international regulatory bodies could exert
pressure, stating that the “global nature” of crypto means that
foreign governments could work for better oversight and more robust
regulations.
Related:
Who’s running in Trump’s race to make US a ‘Bitcoin
superpower?'
In any case, he said that the current situation demands
multi-faceted action as there is currently a need to “safeguard the
principles of fair governance and maintain the US's credibility in
the global financial system.”
Some in the crypto industry see no problem at all and believe
the president’s involvement is just another sign of how the
industry is reaching mainstream appeal.
Chris Barrett, senior director of communications at Chainlink,
congratulated the
project, stating that “The global financial world runs on the U.S.
dollar, and stablecoins are about to make that even harder to
change.”
Arnoud Star Busman, CEO of European stablecoin issuer Quantoz
Payments, told Cointelegraph that USD1 is reflective of “increasing
validation from world-leading brands that stablecoins are carving
the path for the mainstream financial industry to access crypto
assets and tokenized real-world assets.”
The Blockchain Association — an industry lobby group — declined
Cointelegraph’s request for comment.
Magazine:
Arbitrum co-founder skeptical of move to based and
native rollups: Steven Goldfeder
...
Continue reading Trump’s USD1 stablecoin deepens
concerns over conflicts of interest
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Trump’s USD1 stablecoin deepens concerns over
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