
WLFI Prints Fresh All-Time Low After $75M Stablecoin Borrow Against 5B Tokens
Arkham-linked wallets sent $40M+ to Coinbase Prime after posting WLFI on Dolomite, reviving liquidation-risk fears.

Arkham-linked wallets sent $40M+ to Coinbase Prime after posting WLFI on Dolomite, reviving liquidation-risk fears.
WLFI slid to a fresh all-time low after onchain data tied to World Liberty Financial showed billions of WLFI posted as collateral to borrow $75 million in stablecoins. A subsequent $40 million-plus transfer to Coinbase Prime sharpened trader focus on liquidation mechanics and potential sell-side capacity.
WLFI, the token tied to World Liberty Financial, printed a new all-time low around $0.07714 on Saturday, and the drawdown now sits at roughly 83% from the $0.46 peak reached last September, according to CoinMarketCap data. At the time of publication, WLFI was quoted at $0.07879, down 4.66% over the past day, per CoinMarketCap.
The timing matters. The low came as traders digested onchain evidence that wallets linked to World Liberty Financial used a large amount of WLFI as collateral to borrow stablecoins. What stands out here is the market’s tendency to reprice tokens quickly when the marginal narrative shifts from “spot selling pressure” to “forced selling risk.” A token can grind down for weeks on weak demand, but liquidation risk introduces a different kind of urgency because it can turn a price decline into a mechanical seller.
Arkham onchain data shows a wallet linked to World Liberty Financial deposited around 5 billion WLFI tokens on Dolomite, then borrowed $75 million in USD1 and USDC using that WLFI as collateral. After the borrow, the same wallet transferred more than $40 million to Coinbase Prime, per Arkham.
For traders, those are three separate signals that stack on top of each other.
First, the collateral size. Posting billions of units of the project’s own token is the definition of self-collateralization risk. It is not automatically toxic, but it concentrates the system’s stress point into a single variable: WLFI’s price.
Second, the borrowed assets. Stablecoins (USD1 and USDC) are the cleanest form of liquidity in DeFi. Borrowing them against volatile collateral is standard practice, but when the collateral is the borrower’s own token, the market tends to treat the loan as a leverage proxy even if the stated intent is yield.
Third, the exchange flow. Coinbase Prime is an institutional venue used for custody and execution. A $40 million-plus transfer does not prove immediate selling, but it does create credible sell-side or hedging capacity. That is why this flow is a concrete catalyst. Even if the project frames the borrow as yield-driven, the market will price the optionality created by moving size to a prime broker.
A token-backed loan is simple in structure and brutal in stress. The borrower posts collateral, borrows stablecoins, and must maintain a buffer above a liquidation threshold. If the collateral value falls far enough, the protocol can liquidate collateral to repay the debt.
When the collateral is the project’s own token, the reflexivity risk rises. If WLFI sells off, the collateral value drops. If the position approaches liquidation, liquidators may need to sell WLFI into the market to close the loan. That selling can push price lower, which can trigger more liquidation. The loop is mechanical.
The liquidity profile is the other half of the equation. One DeFi commentator summarized the concern in blunt terms: “WLFI has almost a $10 billion FDV, but it is not an extremely liquid ,” adding, “So imagine what would happen if 5% of WLFI's total supply would suddenly need to be sold to liquidate the position.” Another compared the structure to synthetic collateral creation: “It’s the financial equivalent of printing casino chips, borrowing cash against them, and telling everyone else not to panic because the house still believes in the chips.”
Venue scale matters because liquidations are not abstract. The collateral was posted on Dolomite, described as a decentralized lending platform co-founded by World Liberty Financial CTO Corey Caplan. DefiLlama ranks Dolomite 19th among lending platforms by total value locked. The pattern worth noting is how quickly traders discount “contained risk” claims when the venue is smaller and the collateral is less liquid. A liquidation on a top-tier venue can still be violent, but a smaller venue tends to raise questions about depth, concentration, and how smoothly liquidations can clear.
World Liberty Financial has tried to take the temperature down. The project acknowledged the lending activity publicly, said its positions were “well above liquidation thresholds,” and described itself as an “anchor borrower.” It also framed the strategy as yield-driven, writing on X: “Everyday users are earning outsized stablecoin yields right now — at a time when traditional markets are offering very little. That's the whole point.”
That defense leaves the most tradable variable unresolved. No liquidation price, collateral factor, or health metrics were provided alongside the reassurance. Without those parameters, traders cannot map WLFI price levels to forced-sell risk. Uncertainty stays elevated until the market can quantify the buffer.
The second catalyst is governance. On Friday, World Liberty said it will soon introduce a governance proposal to create a phased unlock schedule for WLFI tokens held by early retail buyers, replacing immediate access with a long-term vesting plan subject to a community vote. That matters because unlock mechanics shape supply expectations. In a market already focused on collateral risk, any change to when tokens can move tends to get priced as a liquidity event, even before details are final.
Near-term, four signals sit at the top of the stack: whether Arkham flags further transfers from the linked wallet(s), especially additional moves to Coinbase Prime or other exchanges. Whether the project discloses liquidation parameters that let traders compute risk. The timing and outcome of the promised governance vote. And WLFI’s behavior around the $0.07714 all-time low as a stress test for collateral confidence.
I’m not treating this as a guaranteed liquidation story. The project says the position is well above liquidation thresholds, and that could be true. The problem is that the market is being asked to accept a qualitative assurance while the price is printing an all-time low. That mismatch is why volatility tends to rise in these setups.
Scenario one is stabilization through transparency. If World Liberty Financial publishes concrete liquidation parameters for the Dolomite position, the market can stop guessing. In that world, WLFI holding above the $0.07714 low while exchange flows quiet down would support the idea that the borrow is being managed conservatively and that the Coinbase Prime transfer was operational rather than distributive.
Scenario two is a slow bleed driven by optionality. Even without liquidation pressure, the combination of a $75 million stablecoin borrow and a $40 million-plus move to Coinbase Prime creates persistent overhang. Traders will assume the wallet now has the ability to sell, hedge, or fund other activity. If Arkham flags repeated transfers to Prime or other exchange endpoints, the market will likely keep repricing WLFI around the probability of supply hitting the tape.
Scenario three is a reflexive stress event. This does not require bad intent. It only requires WLFI to keep sliding while the market lacks clarity on liquidation thresholds. In that setup, every incremental low increases the perceived chance that the protocol’s liquidation mechanics become relevant. The venue detail matters here. Dolomite is ranked 19th by TVL on DefiLlama, and the collateral is WLFI itself. If liquidation risk becomes the dominant narrative, traders will assume the unwind could be disorderly.
The confirmation points are straightforward. If liquidation headroom is disclosed and WLFI stops making new lows while exchange-bound flows fade, the market’s forced-sell fear should cool. If the wallet continues sending size to Coinbase Prime and WLFI breaks below $0.07714 without any published health metrics, the core thesis stays intact: traders are repricing WLFI primarily around self-collateralization liquidation risk and the sell-side capacity implied by exchange flows.