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Trump-Linked Crypto Company Notes ‘Substantial Doubt’ It Can Survive Another 12 Months

AI Financial is a publicly traded company heavily invested in Trump-related crypto.
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In a recent SEC filing, AI Financial has indicated that it may not be able to survive another year writing, “These conditions raise substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern within one year after the date these financial statements are issued.”

AI Financial is a publicly-traded company that serves as a major holder of World Liberty Financial’s WLFI tokens. In its quarterly report for the period that ended March 28th, the company posted a net loss from continuing operations of $271.3 million during the quarter, driven largely by a $348.3 million unrealized loss on its massive WLFI token holdings. The company reported only $4.7 million in revenue for the quarter (all from its fintech segment), and it ended the period with $10.5 million in cash and a $5.5 million working-capital deficit, while burning $12.3 million in operating cash flow.

However, management did also outline several potential paths to stabilize the business in their recent filing. The company had already secured a $15 million loan from World Liberty Financial in late January, providing some short-term breathing room. More importantly, it controls approximately 7.28 billion WLFI tokens, which were valued at about $706 million on the balance sheet at quarter end. Those tokens were acquired in August 2025 and remain subject to contractual lock-up provisions until around August 2026. Once unlocked, the company hopes to monetize portions of the position to cover operating needs, alongside plans for fintech revenue growth and possible additional debt or equity raises. 

The ties between AI Financial and World Liberty Financial run deep. Zachary Witkoff serves as chairman of AI Financial while also acting as CEO and co-founder of World Liberty Financial. Board member Zachary Folkman is another World Liberty Financial co-founder. World Liberty Financial itself holds a substantial stake in AI Financial, including 1 million common shares plus warrants and pre-funded warrants that together represent roughly 46% ownership on a fully diluted basis. Notably, World Liberty Financial is a Trump family project. Donald Trump is listed as co-founder emeritus and chief crypto advocate. His sons Eric Trump, Donald Trump Jr., and Barron Trump are co-founders and actively participate in the venture.

In practice, AI Financial functions as a treasury company for the WLFI token. The strategy mirrors what Michael Saylor has pursued at Strategy with bitcoin, where the public company accumulates and holds the asset as its primary reserve. In AI Financial’s case, the reserve asset is the much newer WLFI token. Critics have occasionally labeled the Strategy approach as resembling a Ponzi scheme because it depends on continued capital raises and asset appreciation to sustain operations. Applying a similar model to WLFI introduces additional layers of risk given the token’s shorter history, higher volatility, and dependence on the success of a single Trump-affiliated crypto project.

Although crypto-related projects reportedly increased the Trump family fortune by $1.4 billion in 2025 alone, a number of these Trump-linked projects have faced trouble this year. Most recently, World Liberty Financial filed a defamation lawsuit against crypto billionaire Justin Sun in Florida after Sun accused the project of improperly freezing his token holdings and pressuring him for further investments. Sun had previously purchased billions of WLFI tokens and served in an advisory role.

According to data from CoinMarketCap, the TRUMP memecoin is down 84% over the past year and World Liberty Financial’s WLFI token is down 73%.

Going forward, a key area of concern for many Trump-affiliated crypto businesses will likely be the potential inclusion of ethics or corruption-related provisions in the crypto regulatory bill known as the CLARITY Act, which is currently making its way through the U.S. Senate. The legislation advanced out of the Senate Banking Committee on a 15-9 vote in mid-May 2026, but several Democrats have signaled they will block final passage unless it includes stronger language that would restrict the president, vice president, and their families from certain digital asset transactions.

Much of the investment into these projects has drawn scrutiny over alleged conflicts of interest, including the pardon granted to former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao, the administration’s approval of hundreds of thousands of advanced Nvidia AI chips for the United Arab Emirates shortly after a UAE royal invested $500 million in World Liberty Financial, and the aforementioned Sun’s ability to settle a prior SEC enforcement case after pouring an estimated $175 million into Trump-linked crypto tokens.

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