AI Financial Corp., a token treasury company for World Liberty Financial, is facing significant challenges due to a working capital deficit and mounting liabilities. According to Cointelegraph, the company reported a net loss of $271.5 million in its first-quarter results, a stark increase from the $2.4 million loss recorded a year earlier. The firm, chaired by World Liberty CEO Zach Witkoff, disclosed a working capital deficit of approximately $5.5 million as of March 28, with liabilities totaling $39.1 million against assets of $32.2 million.

These financial conditions have raised substantial doubts about AI Financial's ability to continue operating over the next year. The company, previously known as ALT5 Sigma, became involved in the crypto-buying trend by acquiring World Liberty Financial (WLFI) tokens, a platform backed by the Trump family. To address its financial obligations, AI Financial held 7.3 billion WLFI tokens valued at $703.4 million as of March 28. However, the value of these holdings has decreased by a third since late December, resulting in an unrealized loss of $348.3 million. The company initially paid nearly $1.46 billion for its WLFI holdings.

In January, AI Financial borrowed nearly $15 million from World Liberty under a loan agreement, which it planned to use for a share repurchase program and to acquire more WLFI tokens. Despite these efforts, shares in AI Financial (AIFC) fell by nearly 6.3% on Tuesday, closing at 85 cents, following a 10% decline on Monday. Over the past 12 months, the company's stock has plummeted by approximately 87.5%.

AI Financial's journey to becoming a WLFI treasury company began in early August, following a $1.5 billion direct offering and private placement led by World Liberty Financial. At the time, Witkoff assumed the role of chairman, while World Liberty co-founder Zak Folkman became a board observer. U.S. President Donald Trump's son, Eric Trump, briefly joined the company's board but was quietly removed from the leadership section of its website late last month.