Sold again.
Not a small scale.
5.9 billion tokens.
Continuing to raise funds.
And locking it down tighter.
World Liberty Financial's recent moves are pretty typical—
They’ve already gone through two funding rounds,
raising over $550 million in total.
Now they’re selling another 5.9 billion WLFI to accredited investors.
The focus isn’t on how much is being sold.
It’s about the structure.
👉 About 80% of the early chips are still locked up.
And there’s also a proposal—
to extend the lock-up to at least 2 years,
then gradually release it.
What does that mean?
On the surface, it looks like “long-termism.”
But in reality, it’s about:
👉 Controlling circulation
👉 Delaying selling pressure
👉 Stabilizing prices
To put it simply—
It’s not that they can’t sell.
It’s that they’re “temporarily not allowed to sell.”
This is common in the primary market:
First raise funds,
then lock up,
then slowly release.
Now, here comes the question.
When most of the chips are locked up,
who decides the price?
👉 It’s the small circulating supply
👉 It’s market sentiment
And not the total value.
That’s crucial.
If the unlock starts later—
sudden increase in supply,
can the market absorb it?
Right now, what you see is:
Funding success.
Stable lock-up.
But the real test,
is two years from now.
Do you think this structure is
protecting the project,
or just postponing the risk? $WLFI
$BTC $ETH #wlfi
Not a small scale.
5.9 billion tokens.
Continuing to raise funds.
And locking it down tighter.
World Liberty Financial's recent moves are pretty typical—
They’ve already gone through two funding rounds,
raising over $550 million in total.
Now they’re selling another 5.9 billion WLFI to accredited investors.
The focus isn’t on how much is being sold.
It’s about the structure.
👉 About 80% of the early chips are still locked up.
And there’s also a proposal—
to extend the lock-up to at least 2 years,
then gradually release it.
What does that mean?
On the surface, it looks like “long-termism.”
But in reality, it’s about:
👉 Controlling circulation
👉 Delaying selling pressure
👉 Stabilizing prices
To put it simply—
It’s not that they can’t sell.
It’s that they’re “temporarily not allowed to sell.”
This is common in the primary market:
First raise funds,
then lock up,
then slowly release.
Now, here comes the question.
When most of the chips are locked up,
who decides the price?
👉 It’s the small circulating supply
👉 It’s market sentiment
And not the total value.
That’s crucial.
If the unlock starts later—
sudden increase in supply,
can the market absorb it?
Right now, what you see is:
Funding success.
Stable lock-up.
But the real test,
is two years from now.
Do you think this structure is
protecting the project,
or just postponing the risk? $WLFI
$BTC $ETH #wlfi