A $75 million loan backed by nearly half a billion dollars worth of a company’s own tokens is now at the center of a Senate push to get regulators involved in the Trump family’s crypto operations. The Loan That Raised Questions World Liberty Financial, the crypto project tied to US President Donald Trump and his family, reportedly used around $440 million worth of its WLFI governance tokens as collateral to borrow money through Dolomite, a decentralized lending platform. Related Reading: XRP Records Biggest Spike In Network Usage In 2 Months The transaction produced roughly $65 million in the company’s own USD1 stablecoin and another $10 million in USDC. What made the deal stand out was the timing. Regular investors who held WLFI tokens were still locked in — blocked from selling — while the transaction went through. Shortly after, the token’s price dropped nearly 10% to a record low. Senator Elizabeth Warren sent a letter to SEC Chair Paul Atkins on May 14 asking the agency to look into whether World Liberty Financial misled investors or broke securities laws tied to the WLFI token. Warren set a response deadline of May 26. WARREN ASKS SEC TO INVESTIGATE WORLD LIBERTY FINANCIAL Senator Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) sent a letter to SEC Chair Paul Atkins (@SECPaulSAtkins) on Thursday, urging the agency to investigate whether World Liberty Financial (@worldlibertyfi), the Trump family’s crypto… pic.twitter.com/q9usPJxD6n — BSCN (@BSCNews) May 14, 2026 The Crypto Issue: A Lopsided Structure The senator’s concerns go beyond the loan. According to reports, Trump-affiliated entities stand to collect 75% of all WLFI token sale proceeds after expenses. The investors who bought those tokens, by contrast, faced strict restrictions on when they could sell. Warren’s letter cited reports that the company raised close to $715 million through token sales, while the Trump family’s total crypto-linked wealth connected to the project reportedly crossed $1 billion. DT Marks DEFI LLC, together with certain Trump family members, reportedly holds around 22.5 billion WLFI tokens. Warren has been pushing for tighter investor protections as Congress reviews broader digital asset rules under the proposed CLARITY Act, one of the largest crypto-focused bills in US history. Warren’s Political Moves Fall Short During a recent CLARITY Act markup session, Warren introduced amendments specifically targeting the Trump family’s involvement in crypto markets. Related Reading: Is Zcash The Next Bitcoin? Investors Rush Into The Privacy Coin Narrative Those amendments were voted down along party lines. The broader debate over crypto regulation continues, with the Warren letter adding pressure on the SEC at a moment when the agency is navigating both political crosswinds and calls from the industry for clearer rules. Whether Atkins, who is widely viewed as friendly to the crypto sector, will take formal action remains to be seen. Featured image from Drew Angerer/Getty Images, chart from TradingView