Trump crypto firm plans public company to hold family token
In the latest twist of Washington-meets-Web3, the Trump crypto firm behind the WLFI token is preparing a public vehicle designed to hold its “family token” and cash reserves, an effort that could supercharge fundraising while testing the edges of securities law. Reports indicate the venture is sounding out investors for a roughly $1.5 billion capital raise and evaluating a Nasdaq-listed structure to warehouse WLFI and related assets. The Trump crypto firm has not formally announced timelines, but term sheets are circulating and interest appears brisk, according to multiple outlets.
What the public WLFI ‘treasury company’ would actually do
At a high level, the proposed entity functions like a digital-asset treasury: a publicly traded company whose primary purpose is to hold WLFI tokens (and potentially cash or short-term instruments), offering traditional investors exposure to the token’s economics without forcing them to self-custody crypto. Similar structures have proliferated in the last year as institutions search for compliant ways to access token projects. In this case, early deal materials describe a token-holding company with an independent board, audited reporting, and exchange-listed shares.
Why now: policy tailwinds and a hotter token market
The timing isn’t accidental. The administration has leaned into a pro-crypto policy agenda, including a stablecoin framework and friendlier signals to tokenization initiatives, which has emboldened issuers and intermediaries. Meanwhile, WLFI, initially launched with transfer restrictions, is moving toward broader tradability, expanding potential liquidity and investor reach. A listed treasury wrapper could become the on-ramp for pensions, family offices, and RIAs that can’t touch on-chain assets directly but can buy equities.
The governance question: who controls the vault?
Deal drafts seen by reporters suggest Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. are expected to serve on the board of the treasury company, a detail likely to draw scrutiny from governance hawks. On one hand, insider directors can align brand, strategy, and distribution. On the other, investor protections, from related-party transaction policies to lockups and clear disclosure of token flows, will be paramount if the vehicle lists in the U.S. Expect SEC staff to focus on valuation methodology, liquidity management, and any mechanisms that could advantage insiders over public shareholders.
The regulatory tightrope: security, commodity, or something new?
WLFI’s status remains the fulcrum. If the token’s economics or marketing resemble a security, the treasury company’s own filings must reconcile token compliance with public-company obligations. If WLFI is positioned more like a utility or payment token, counsel will still need to address custody, market-manipulation risk, Treasury/OFAC screening, and exchange-listing rules. In short, the listing doesn’t make the token questions disappear, it magnifies them under public-market disclosure. As one policy analyst told Millionaire MNL, a public wrapper “brings crypto optics into the 10-K era.”
Why this could still work
Investors have poured billions into bitcoin treasuries, spot ETFs, and listed miners for a simple reason: clarity + liquidity. If this WLFI structure delivers daily NAV transparency, big-four audits, and clean separation between token issuance and treasury management, it could attract capital well beyond crypto-native funds. Media momentum around the Trump family brand only amplifies the distribution. But the bar will be high. As seen in prior cycles covered by Millionaire MNL, vehicles that skimp on governance or disclosure can rally fast, and unravel faster.