Trump’s Crypto Dreams Hit a Roadblock with a Buggy Launch

Donald Trump’s latest bid to wade into the crypto space was not as successful as he had possibly imagined. On the announcement day of this trading platform, his cryptocurrency known as World Liberty Financial (WLFI) faced a great setback with most of the created cryptocurrencies remaining idle. Launching like this one might not have been a “trump” card at all despite the fact that it came with a lot of huffing and puffing.

The first week of trading generally set the tone of World Liberty Financial

Earlier this year in mid-September, Trump along with his sons, and some of his banker friends unveiled their big idea of launching a new cryptocurrency company known as the World Liberty Financial. The idea was simple: provide virtual coins with which the users could interact in the same way as they interact with Bitcoins and even participate in some kind of polls on the platform’s choices. However, something unpleasant happened when at long last the big day unfolded. The company had offered 20 billion tokens for sale, each at 1.5 cents, and by Tuesday night only three percent were sold. That’s just $9 million worth sold from the $300 million goal.

Glitches and Bugs on Day One

From this It appears that technical problems were to blame most of the time. The platform users complained that the website and services to get there were down throughout the day. As one would expect potential investors felt when they wanted to invest on the tokens but could not do so due to these hitches. But in the crypto world, where people can lose millions in mere minutes.

Borrowing Features but nothing original This research work establishes that organizations borrow features from other organizations’ reward systems and policies but does not come up with an original strategy.

It also plans to provide a service where people can lend or borrow cryptocurrencies from one another as part of their offering under Trump.  Well, not the most revolutionary, though. Other older platforms such as Aave have been providing similar services for years and it might make some people ask if WLFI is nothing more than a glamorous attempt at creating something that already exists.

Trump’s Crypto U-Turn

Rather predictably, Trump is wasting no time dabbling in crypto, a little less predictably. For the years he spent in the White House; he was quite vocal and unambiguous from the aspect of futures’ standpoints demonstrating his doubts about the legitimacy of cryptocurrencies referring to them as a ‘scam’. But now he looks at the 2024 elections and tries to position himself as the ‘pro-bitcoin president.’

Will WLFI Bounce Back?

All in all, while calling the social Angel launch a miserable failure may not quite be right, it has been by means smooth sailing for World Liberty Financial. There is still the potential for the platform to pick up users if the technical problems are solved and the project manages to differentiate itself in the crypto marketplace. Still, Trump and his team must move quickly—because anything can happen in the crypto space faster than you can say ‘The blockchain’.

Comments are closed.