The founder of the Tron blockchain, Justin Sun, has become the largest investor in Donald Trump’s crypto project, World Liberty Financial, after buying up $30 million worth of its token.
“We are thrilled to invest $30 million in World Liberty Financial as its largest investor,” Sun wrote in a Nov. 25 X post. “TRON is committed to making America great again and leading innovation.”
Before Sun’s post, a wallet that Etherscan tagged as owned by the Sun-controlled crypto exchange HTX, formerly Huobi, was seen purchasing 2 billion World Liberty Financial (WLFI) tokens worth $0.015 apiece.
WLFI sales have been sluggish since it launched in mid-October, with investors turned off by the project restricting sales to non-US persons and US-accredited investors, along with making the tokens nontransferable — meaning they can’t be sold.
Just $20 million worth of WLFI had been sold before Sun’s buy, which then pushed total sales to $52 million, still just 17% of World Liberty’s lofty $300 million token sale goal.
But it does now mean that Trump and his family will start to get paid. The project’s “gold paper” — what it called its white paper — says the President-elect’s company, DT Marks DEFI LLC, is entitled to 75% of net revenues after the project makes $30 million, which it now has.
Donald Trump is listed as the platform’s “chief crypto advocate,” while his sons Eric, Barron and Donald Trump Jr. are all “Web3 ambassadors.” The incoming president ran a campaign promising to make the US the world’s “crypto capital” and reel in regulatory oversight of the industry.
Meanwhile, Sun and Tron have their own troubles with US regulators, having been sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission in March 2023, accused of selling the Tron TRX$0.1979 token as an unregistered security and wash-trading it to raise its price, allegations that Sun denies.
Just last week, on Nov. 21, Sun shared that he paid $6.2 million at auction for an artwork of a banana taped to a wall and planned to eat it.
TRX has dropped 5.5% in the past day to under 20 cents. It’s up around 84% this year but is still around 15% off from its 23 cents peak it hit in January 2018.
World Liberty Financial and Tron did not immediately respond to requests for comment.