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WLFI internal lending amplifies political risks, exposing structural weaknesses in DeFi
How Internal Borrowing Triggers WLFI’s Political Fragility
@DefiIgnas’ tweet labels WLFI treasury operations as “insider ladder-climbing,” tying DeFi mechanisms to the political risks of the Trump era. Emotions are emotions, but data matters more: borrowing 504.4M USD1 (not USDC), with roughly 3.0 billion WLFI tokens pledged as collateral; at the time funds entered the pool, the valuation was about 484 million USD (per multiple reports). Bad-debt risk is exaggerated, but it’s already enough to hit both price and sentiment: on April 9, WLFI fell to 0.090 USD, and trading volume clearly surged. On-chain data (TokenTerminal) shows Dolomite TVL rose to 932 million USD on April 7, but DOLO’s market cap is still only about 15 million USD—indicating investors are fleeing governance risk, not recognizing organic growth.
On crypto Twitter, 15 high-impact accounts have torn the narrative into panic-buys and skeptics. Analysts such as @EthanDeFi_ point out: if WLFI drops sharply, there may be positions that can’t be liquidated, leading to losses at the pool level. The narrative has also shifted from “Trump-endorsed stablecoin derivative strategies” to “risk assets with high political sensitivity,” and the DeFi community has started discussing contagion risks similar to insider-style lending pools. Don’t stare at the 13.5% APY: the actual interest rate has at one point reached 35% (lending) and 30% (borrowing, sources Phemex, BeInCrypto). At its core, it’s supply scarcity created by a single entity—not sustainable yield.
Core issue: WLFI’s internal borrowing isn’t innovation—it’s a governance and trust discount under leverage. After April 8, there’s been no authoritative clarification, and no on-chain transaction hashes that can be verified. This is directly related to WLFI’s underperformance versus peers, and it may also trigger a broader risk re-pricing around “treasury self-trading.”
High Yield Can’t Offset the Risk of a Liquidation Path
Tweets define high APY as a trap; the data layer is clearer: Dolomite’s mechanism is temporarily holding up—no liquidation has happened yet; what it relies on is WLFI’s collateral buffers. But if the midterm political catalyst fails or reverses (see BitcoinWorld risk analysis), WLFI’s sharp drop will force the sale of low-liquidity collateral, and the tail risk hasn’t been priced in sufficiently. The pricing implied by DOLO at about 0.034 USD and roughly 3 million USD in daily trading volume is more like a “liquidity trap” under governance hollowing. The freeze of withdrawals has already sent a signal: don’t focus on “free收益”; the key is the probability of the clearing path—if the Republican Party weakens in the midterm elections, I estimate there’s a 60% chance WLFI will fall below 0.05 USD in Q4.
Conclusion:
Judgment: The market’s reaction to this narrative has already started, but it hasn’t been fully priced in yet. Shorting/hedging is more advantageous for traders right now; builders and long-term holders across multiple protocols will benefit from trust migrating. Pure long-only capital coming in is already too late.