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Trump-Linked DeFi Project World Liberty Teams With Re7 for USD1 Stablecoin Vault
Trump-Linked DeFi Project World Liberty Teams With Re7 for USD1 Stablecoin Vault

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Trump-Linked DeFi Project World Liberty Teams With Re7 for USD1 Stablecoin Vault

World Liberty Financial (WLF), the decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol associated with U.S. President Donald Trump and his family, is working with Re7 Labs to establish a vault for its USD1 stablecoin on lending platforms Euler and Lista, the companies said in a statement Friday. The move is part of World Liberty's broader initiative to scale USD1 across Binance's BNB Chain, a blockchain known for its low transaction costs and high-speed infrastructure. The stablecoin is positioned as a dollar-pegged digital asset designed for use within DeFi ecosystems. Re7 Labs, an arm of London-based DeFi hedge fund Re7 Capital, is playing a key role in the effort. Just last week, Re7 Labs disclosed it would receive up to $10 million from Hong Kong-based VMS Group. The family office, which oversees roughly $4 billion in assets, is making its first foray into crypto with the investment. 'This collaboration reflects a shared commitment to building the next generation of DeFi infrastructure — where stability, transparency and capital efficiency converge,' said Evgeny Gokhberg, founder of Re7 Capital, said in the statement. 'Working alongside World Liberty, Euler and BNB Chain, we're advancing a model for stablecoin adoption that meets the expectations of both crypto-native and institutional users.' Euler and Lista are decentralized lending platforms that enable users to borrow and lend digital assets using smart contracts. The addition of a USD1 stablecoin vault to these platforms could make it easier for traders and institutions to access dollar-pegged liquidity within the DeFi environment. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Trump Is Doing Crypto Corruption With a Billionaire Leader of Fake Country: Report
Trump Is Doing Crypto Corruption With a Billionaire Leader of Fake Country: Report

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Trump Is Doing Crypto Corruption With a Billionaire Leader of Fake Country: Report

One of the many ways that Donald Trump's first presidential term was unprecedented is that his brazen self-dealing triggered multiple federal lawsuits alleging violations of the Emoluments Clause, or the provision of the U.S. Constitution that bars federal officials from accepting money and gifts from both foreign and domestic actors. But two of those suits were dismissed after Trump lost the 2020 election, while a third was dismissed by the Supreme Court, overturning lower court rulings that let the case against Trump proceed. In the opening months of his second term, Trump has been more aggressive than ever about cashing in on his powerful position, particularly in the cryptocurrency space. And new research from the anti-corruption watchdog group shared exclusively with Rolling Stone, suggests that he is flouting the federal law against receiving emoluments in a new way. Trump isn't only cozying up to foreign governments, including the United Arab Emirates, through deals with his family's burgeoning crypto empire. He is also increasingly entangled with a major investor who claims the title of prime minister for a tiny European nation that doesn't technically exist — yet. More from Rolling Stone Supreme Court Hands Trump 'GIANT WIN' in Birthright Citizenship Case Trump and Hegseth Are Melting Down Over Leaked Iran Strike Intel Scarlett Johansson, Sheryl Crow, Zayn Malik Urge Congress Not to Cut Food-Assistance Programs The crypto industry backed Trump in 2024 — becoming the biggest corporate spender of the election cycle — and the president's family has been substantially enriched by their new crypto plays, including collectible meme coins and the crypto exchange World Liberty Financial. Their combined net worth has soared by billions, crypto now accounts for a majority of Trump's personal fortune, and his administration has made every effort to deregulate the digital asset economy. The situation has created obvious opportunities for individuals from within the U.S. and abroad to try to get close to the president by backing the Trumps' digital asset ventures. Last month, for example, Eric Trump and Zach Witkoff, a co-founder of World Liberty Financial, announced an eyebrow-raising deal. The United Arab Emirates-backed venture firm MGX, they said, would use the World Liberty digital coin USD1 for a $2 billion deal with Binance, the world's largest crypto exchange. The Trumps and Witkoffs — Zach is the son of billionaire Steve Witkoff, the World Liberty co-founder emeritus and White House envoy to the Middle East — stand to reap tens of millions from the transaction. What's more, in 2023, Binance pleaded guilty to an array of financial crimes, including money laundering, paying a fine of $4 billion. A separate Securities and Exchange Commission civil suit against the company was formally dropped in May as the agency abandoned a spate of enforcement actions against crypto firms. Democratic Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Jeff Merkley warned in a letter that the creation of the USD1 token had 'set the stage for a new level of public corruption by creating a fuss-free mechanism for foreign governments to provide [Trump] with kickbacks and bribes.' The lawmakers also noted that the MGX deal 'may provide a template for other foreign governments to curry [Trump's] favor.' Trump's ties to one crypto magnate in particular may raise similar emoluments concerns, according to That would be Justin Sun, a Chinese-born crypto billionaire who until recently could not travel to the U.S. for fear of arrest for alleged financial crimes. Sun no longer has any problem attending events on American soil — including events with the president, or the ultra-MAGA Bitcoin 2025 conference in Las Vegas — because after he invested $75 million into $WLFI, the first digital token from World Liberty, the SEC froze its fraud case against him. Now Sun is an official advisor to (and prolific promoter of) World Liberty, and his own digital asset platform, Tron, which the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crimes has called a 'preferred choice for crypto money launderers' in Asia. Tron is set to go public in the U.S., with Eric Trump taking a role at the company. Sun has separately spent an estimated $40 million on $TRUMP, the meme coin the president launched two days before taking office, making him the largest investor in the gimmick token; he and approximately 200 other top buyers were invited to an exclusive dinner banquet at Trump's golf club outside Washington, D.C. last month. That's not all. In October, Sun was elected prime minister of Liberland, a globally unrecognized micronation. Founded in 2015 by the Czech libertarian activist Vít Jedlička on about 2.5 square miles of land in Croatia next to the Danube, it remains mostly forested and has no permanent residents. But a website for the project claims that it has more than 1,000 citizens and has received nearly 800,000 applications for citizenship. The country's theoretical economy and administrative functions are all blockchain-based, with one token used for business transactions and another for voting. There is no gun control, and taxes are voluntary, though only those who contribute them can vote on political candidates and legislative policy. Its motto: 'To Live and Let Live.' Sun serves as a de facto ambassador from the theoretical country and is campaigning along with Jedlička, the president of Liberland, to legitimize it in the eyes of other nations — the U.S. included. In May, Jedlička shared a video of Sun entering the White House complex with the caption 'Prime minister of @Liberland in White House today!' Speaking about his initial investment in World Liberty ahead of Trump's inauguration, Sun called it 'a very precious opportunity for Liberland in 2025' and mentioned meeting with Steve Witkoff, who has retained a stake in World Liberty even while working for the White House. 'I think if we have a very good stand on U.S. policies we will have a big breakthrough in the diplomatic relationship,' Sun said in a video shared on the Liberland YouTube account. Sun, Jedlička, and Liberland vice president Bogie Wozniak were all VIP guests for Trump's inauguration festivities. Richard Painter, a lawyer and professor and vice-chair of the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, thinks Sun is probably 'living in fantasyland' when it comes to turning Liberland into a real country. But he says that a 'real, genuine effort to set up a sovereign nation' — which Sun represents as a head of state — could put the emoluments question in play. Such a separatist campaign could encompass Sun claiming 'his own financial regulations in this country,' says Painter, who served as George W. Bush's chief White House ethics lawyer, asserting that 'you can do things in crypto in [Liberland] that you couldn't do in Croatia, because [Sun] can make the rules. This sort of becomes what Bermuda is for tax havens.' Likewise, Sun and his fellow ministers could signal a serious attempt to break away from existing governance by defying the financial regulations of the European Union, to which Croatia belongs. In this type of scenario, Painter explains, Sun might indeed be seen as a foreign leader, and Trump profiting from his investments would be improper under constitutional law. 'The Emoluments Clause applies to foreign princes and heads of state of foreign governments, but would also apply to those who claim to be foreign governments who claim sovereignty, whether or not the United States recognizes that,' he says. 'We don't formally recognize Taiwan anymore, but if something came in from the government of Taiwan, we'd see it as an emoluments violation.' Having the Trump administration acknowledge Liberland as a distinct state outside Croatian and EU law would throw this corruption issue into sharper relief — yet Sun and his allies clearly stand to gain from such a diplomatic development. Running their own blockchain-based sovereign country as a cabal of crypto kingpins, they would no doubt make the most of the freedom from regulatory oversight there. Neither World Liberty Financial nor Sun returned requests for comment about the ethics of the business relationship between Sun, the president, and the crypto ventures controlled by the Trumps. White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly did get back to Rolling Stone with a statement. 'The President is working to secure good deals for the American people, not for himself,' she wrote. 'President Trump only acts in the best interests of the American public — which is why they overwhelmingly re-elected him to this office, despite years of lies and false accusations against him and his businesses from the fake news media.' Executive Director Tony Carrk disagrees about Trump's priorities. 'In total disregard for the Emoluments Clause and every presidential ethical standard, Trump and Steve Witkoff are using a barely regulated crypto scheme to grab up tens of millions from an accused Chinese crypto fraudster whose riches seemingly helped elevate him to be leader of his own micronation — and now wants recognition from the U.S. government,' Carrk said in a statement shared with Rolling Stone. 'While Sun and many other foreign investors with hidden agendas were invited to buy first-class access to the president, Trump has yet to make time for any one of the millions of Americans about to lose their health coverage and food aid under the 'beautiful' Trump tax giveaway for the rich,' added Carrk. 'Wearing corruption on his sleeve seems to be President Trump's strategy for avoiding congressional scrutiny. But his allies in Congress shouldn't wait around for Trump's many self-enrichment schemes leveraging the power of the White House to leave American working people and our national security worse off.' Representatives for World Liberty Financial have not been shy about advertising how major investments in the firm can secure a line to the president, who until recently was listed as the company's 'chief crypto advocate' and is the first person featured on its website, as a co-founder emeritus, alongside his sons. He also, of course, effectively dictates U.S. crypto policy. World Liberty has approached a wide range of foreign businesses in looking to establish relationships that raise its profile and, as of March, had sold more than half a billion dollars worth of its tokens. When it comes to the conflicts of interest Trump has embraced in this field, and the scale of these possible emoluments violations, both have absolutely dwarfed the repeated allegations of foreign governments paying Trump through his hotels and restaurants in his first term — the deals that brought the unsuccessful emoluments suits against him in his first term. Liberland did once get in on the Trump hotel scheme, though. In 2018, a year after a delegation from the tiny region attended the president's first inauguration, its leadership threw an exclusive reception for American lawmakers at Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C., spending at least $750,000 on accommodations. The Trump Organization sold the hotel in 2022, and today, the first family sees far bigger windfalls from its crypto partners. After more than a century as real estate moguls, the dynasty has found greener pastures. Best of Rolling Stone Every Super Bowl Halftime Show, Ranked From Worst to Best The United States of Weed Gaming Levels Up

Trump's World Liberty Gains Another International Crypto Partner
Trump's World Liberty Gains Another International Crypto Partner

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Trump's World Liberty Gains Another International Crypto Partner

(Bloomberg) -- World Liberty Financial Inc. is entering into a partnership with an arm of Re7 Capital, a decentralized-finance hedge fund based in London that is set to receive up to $10 million in investment from Hong Kong family office VMS Group. Philadelphia Transit System Votes to Cut Service by 45%, Hike Fares US Renters Face Storm of Rising Costs Squeezed by Crowds, the Roads of Central Park Are Being Reimagined Mapping the Architectural History of New York's Chinatown US State Budget Wounds Intensify From Trump, DOGE Policy Shifts No financial terms were disclosed. The Trump family affiliated decentralized finance platform plans on launching a USD1 stablecoin vault on Euler and Lista with Re7 Labs, the innovation arm of Re7 Capital, according to a joint statement between World Liberty Financial and Re7. The move is a part of a larger initiative to scale World Liberty's USD1 on Binance's BNB Chain, the decentralized blockchain ecosystem of the world's largest crypto platform. 'This collaboration reflects a shared commitment to building the next generation of DeFi infrastructure—where stability, transparency, and capital efficiency converge,' said Evgeny Gokhberg, founder of Re7 Capital. 'Working alongside World Liberty, Euler, and BNB Chain, we're advancing a model for stablecoin adoption that meets the expectations of both crypto-native and institutional users.' VMS Group, a money manager to some of Hong Kong's richest individuals, is making its first foray into crypto with its investment into Re7 Capital, Bloomberg News reported this week. Re7 has said it uses a market-neutral strategy through which it earns yield by providing liquidity on DeFi exchanges and by lending stablecoins — while using hedging to mitigate price swings. On Thursday, United Arab Emirates based Aqua 1 Foundation said it bought $100 million of World Liberty tokens, the second Middle East-based investor to put money into the platform. The investment will make the little known crypto fund the largest individual investor of the Trump-backed digital asset project, surpassing crypto entrepreneur Justin Sun, who's also an adviser to World Liberty. In May, MGX, a technology investment firm established by Abu Dhabi's sovereign wealth fund, used World Liberty's USD1 stablecoin to facilitate its $2 billion investment in Binance. Last month, the US Securities and Exchange Commission moved to end its legal battle against Binance, the latest sign of the regulator's dramatic shift in how it polices cryptocurrency. The regulator and the exchange's co-founder Changpeng Zhao filed a joint motion to stay the case in the US District Court for the District of Columbia. The move followed a joint request in February to pause the lawsuit for 60 days. America's Top Consumer-Sentiment Economist Is Worried How to Steal a House Inside Gap's Last-Ditch, Tariff-Addled Turnaround Push Apple Test-Drives Big-Screen Movie Strategy With F1 Luxury Counterfeiters Keep Outsmarting the Makers of $10,000 Handbags ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Melden Sie sich an, um Ihr Portfolio aufzurufen. Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten

6 Americans detained in South Korea for trying to send rice and Bibles to North Korea by sea
6 Americans detained in South Korea for trying to send rice and Bibles to North Korea by sea

Indian Express

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Indian Express

6 Americans detained in South Korea for trying to send rice and Bibles to North Korea by sea

Six Americans were detained Friday in South Korea for trying to send 1,600 plastic bottles filled with rice, miniature Bibles, USD 1 bills and USB sticks toward North Korea by sea, police said. The Americans were apprehended on front-line Gwanghwa Island before throwing the bottles into the sea so they could float toward North Korean shores on the tides, two Gwanghwa police officers said. They said the Americans are being investigated on allegations they violated the law on the management of safety and disasters. The officers, who requested anonymity because they weren't authorised to speak to media on the issue, refused to provide personal details of the Americans in line with privacy rules. Gwanghwa police said they haven't found what is on the USB sticks. The US Embassy in South Korea had no immediate public comment. For years, activists have sought to float plastic bottles or fly balloons across the border carrying anti-North Korea propaganda leaflets and USB thumb drives carrying South Korean dramas and K-pop songs, a practice that was banned from 2021-2023 over concerns it could inflame tensions with the North. North Korea has responded to previous balloon campaigns with fiery rhetoric and other shows of anger, and last year the country launched its own balloons across the border, dumping rubbish on various South Korean sites including the presidential compound. In 2023, South Korea's Constitutional Court struck down a controversial law that criminalised the sending of leaflets and other items to North Korea, calling it an excessive restriction on free speech. But since taking office in early June, the new liberal government of President Lee Jae Myung is pushing to crack down on such civilian campaigns with other safety-related laws to avoid a flare-up tensions with North Korea and promote the safety of frontline South Korean residents. On June 14, police detained an activist for allegedly flying balloons toward North Korea from Gwanghwa Island. Lee took office with a promise to restart long-dormant talks with North Korea and establish peace on the Korean Peninsula. Lee's government halted frontline anti-Pyongyang propaganda loudspeaker broadcasts to try to ease military tensions. North Korean broadcasts have not been heard in South Korean front-line towns since then. But it's unclear if North Korea will respond to Lee's conciliatory gesture after vowing last year to sever relations with South Korea and abandon the goal of peaceful Korean reunification. Official talks between the Koreas have been stalled since 2019, when US-led diplomacy on North Korean denuclearisation derailed.

UAE fund invests $100 million in US blockchain firm WLFI
UAE fund invests $100 million in US blockchain firm WLFI

Al Etihad

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Al Etihad

UAE fund invests $100 million in US blockchain firm WLFI

27 June 2025 00:38 A. SREENIVASA REDDY (ABU DHABI)A UAE-based Web3 fund, Aqua 1 Foundation, has announced a $100 million investment in World Liberty Financial (WLFI), a decentralised finance (DeFi) platform linked to US President Donald Trump. The investment will be made through the purchase of WLFI's governance move was disclosed in a joint statement issued by both entities, which was shared as a press release by joint statement emphasised their shared ambition to accelerate the global shift from traditional finance to decentralised models. The governance tokens will allow Aqua 1 to participate in shaping WLFI's operational and strategic decisions, although they do not represent ownership or entitle holders to a share in the project's seeks to transform the fintech sector through blockchain technology, enabling access to financial services via digital tokens without intermediaries such as banks.'We're excited to work hand-in-hand with the team at Aqua 1,' said Zak Folkman, co-founder of WLFI. 'Aligning with Aqua 1 validates our blueprint for global financial innovation, as we have a joint mission to bring digital assets to the masses and strengthen our nation's standing as a champion and leader of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology.'The collaboration comes at a time of growing institutional interest in DeFi. Aqua 1's investment will also support WLFI's USD1 ecosystem — a suite of payment and treasury management tools aimed at broadening blockchain adoption among businesses."WLFI's USD1 ecosystem and RWA pipeline embody the trillion-dollar structural pivot opportunity we seek to catalyse," said Dave Lee, founding partner of Aqua 1. 'We want to be at the heart of this transformation where traditional capital markets merge with decentralised financial primitives.'Looking ahead, the two organisations plan to co-develop BlockRock, an institutional platform for real-world asset (RWA) tokenisation, and support the launch of Aqua Fund, a UAE-domiciled investment vehicle. The fund will focus on blockchain infrastructure, artificial intelligence integration, and global Web3 adoption, with plans to be listed on a secondary trading platform within Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM). WLFI has already raised hundreds of millions of dollars through the sale of governance tokens. International agencies have reported several recent high-value purchases by funds and high-net-worth individuals. In April, Abu Dhabi-based DWF Labs acquired $25 million worth of WLFI governance tokens, while Chinese-born crypto entrepreneur Justin Sun is reported to have spent $75 million on them.

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