World Liberty Financial, a Trump-linked crypto venture, is rolling out a new global remittance platform called World Swap that aims to disrupt the foreign exchange market with lower fees and direct transfers.
WLFI, a crypto company backed by the Trump family, announced plans to launch a new service called World Swap during the Consensus conference in Hong Kong. Co-founder Zak Folkman said the platform will let users send remittances at a fraction of the cost currently charged by banks and major providers. The launch comes as the company faces congressional scrutiny over foreign investments tied to the UAE.
Folkman highlighted that more than $7 trillion moves between currencies annually, and traditional services charge high fees for these transactions. WLFI aims to address this by offering faster, cheaper access to global money transfers through World Swap, which will be powered by its proprietary USD1 stablecoin.
The platform will:
No official launch date was provided, but the company indicated the platform is launching soon.
World Swap is the second major release in WLFI’s ecosystem. In January, the company launched World Liberty Markets, a lending platform also driven by its USD1 stablecoin. According to Folkman:
The strategy signals WLFI’s broader ambitions in the decentralized finance (DeFi) space, using stablecoin-based infrastructure to build a self-sustaining ecosystem.
WLFI’s rapid growth has triggered political and legal pushback. Recent investigations revealed that Aryam Investment 1, a firm controlled by UAE national security advisor Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, acquired a 49 percent stake in WLFI just days before President Trump’s second inauguration.
Key points of concern include:
President Trump addressed the issue in a White House press conference, stating he had no personal knowledge of the UAE deal.
Despite growing controversy, WLFI’s native token has surged, gaining over 2.7 percent in the last 24 hours. Market analysts credit renewed interest to the World Swap announcement and a perception that major foreign backing makes the platform “too big to fail.”
Image Credit – CoinGecko.com
In my experience watching crypto and politics collide, this story has everything: global money, stablecoins, DeFi, and high-stakes power plays. The idea of lowering remittance fees is a genuinely valuable use case for crypto, especially if it works seamlessly with debit cards and banks. But when a sitting president’s family is tied to foreign money and policymaking, it sets off every red flag. Whether WLFI becomes the next fintech giant or just another political flashpoint, one thing’s clear: everyone is watching now.
The post Trump-Backed Crypto WLFI To Launch Remittance Platform appeared first on CoinLaw.


