President Donald Trump addressed the Oval Office on Monday, February 2, 2026, to distance himself from a controversial $500 million investment into the Trump-linked cryptocurrency firm, World Liberty Financial (WLFI).
The deal, first reported by the Wall Street Journal, involves a massive stake purchase by an entity tied to the United Arab Emirates’ (UAE) national security adviser, Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan.
The President maintained that he has “no personal knowledge” of the transaction, asserting that his family manages the business independently. “My sons are handling that—my family is handling it,” Trump told reporters, emphasizing that his current focus is directed toward escalating geopolitical tensions in Russia, Ukraine, and Iran.
The “Spy Sheikh” and the WLFI Deal
The transaction was reportedly finalized on January 16, 2025, just four days before Trump’s second inauguration. It was executed through Aryam Investment 1, an Abu Dhabi-based vehicle managed by executives from the UAE’s flagship AI firm, G42.
- Ownership Shift: Aryam Investment acquired a 49% stake in WLFI, making it the startup’s largest single shareholder.
- Upfront Payouts: Of the total $500 million commitment, $187 million was transferred directly to Trump family-controlled entities (specifically DT Marks DEFI LLC and DT Marks SC LLC).
- Witkoff Connection: An additional $31 million flowed to entities tied to the family of Steve Witkoff, a WLFI co-founder who was recently appointed as the U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East.
Strategic Timing: Crypto Cash for AI Chips?
The primary source of political scrutiny stems from the timing of the investment relative to major U.S. policy shifts favoring the UAE. Critics point to a “money-for-policy” sequence that occurred shortly after the deal was signed.
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- January 2025: UAE secretly acquires 49% of the Trump family’s crypto firm.
- March 2025: Sheikh Tahnoon, dubbed the “Spy Sheikh” for his role as UAE intelligence chief, met with Trump and Witkoff at the White House.
- May 2025: The Trump administration approved the export of 500,000 advanced Nvidia AI chips to the UAE, reversing long-standing security restrictions intended to prevent the technology from reaching China.
- Treasury Support: Shortly before the chip deal, the Emirati fund MGX used WLFI’s native stablecoin, USD1, to complete a $2 billion investment in the Binance exchange, significantly boosting the stablecoin’s market standing.
Political Firestorm and “Corruption” Allegations
Congressional Democrats have reacted with sharp condemnation, led by Senator Elizabeth Warren, who characterized the deal as “corruption, plain and simple.”
- National Security Concerns: Lawmakers are questioning if the administration “sold out” American technological advantages for family profit. Senator Chris Murphy alleged the deal broke “decades of national security precedent.”
- Ethics Defense: A White House spokesperson insisted that existing ethics frameworks are sufficient, noting that the President’s assets are managed by his children and that there is “no conflict of interest.”
- Institutional Deadlock: Financial analysts suggest this controversy could stall pending crypto market structure legislation, as Democrats are now demanding stringent new ethics clauses that Republicans may reject.
Conclusion: A Legacy of “Unprecedented” Business
While President Trump maintains his “Chief Crypto Advocate” title on WLFI’s documents, his official stance remains one of total separation from the firm’s executive decisions. However, with World Liberty Financial now pursuing a national trust bank charter and integrating its stablecoin into sovereign systems like Pakistan’s, the intersection of the Trump brand and global finance continues to rewrite the rules of presidential ethics.
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