WLFI, the governance token of Donald Trump’s family-linked crypto venture World Liberty Financial, risks falling another 30% after trending lower for nearly a year.
The bearish outlook comes from a symmetrical triangle forming on WLFI’s daily chart.
In WLFI’s case, the broader trend remains firmly bearish, increasing the risk that the triangle resolves to the downside. A decisive break below its rising trendline support near $0.055–$0.057 could confirm the bearish continuation setup.
The triangle’s measured move, calculated using the pattern’s maximum height, puts WLFI’s downside target near $0.043, or roughly 30% below current prices.
The bearish outlook is further supported by WLFI trading below its 100-day (purple) and 200-day (blue) exponential moving averages (EMAs), showing that the token’s longer-term trend remains under pressure.
A decisive daily close above the triangle’s upper trendline and the 50-day EMA (red) near $0.061 would weaken the bearish setup. WLFI has already reclaimed its 20-day EMA near $0.059, while its daily RSI has moved above 50, showing improving short-term momentum.
A confirmed upside breakout could first send WLFI toward its 100-day EMA near $0.071. The triangle’s measured-move target sits around $0.078, roughly 30% above current prices.
Therefore, a breakout above the triangle resistance would invalidate the immediate $0.043 downside outlook and raise the possibility of a short-term trend reversal.
WLFI is down roughly 90% from its peak, trading near $0.06 after debuting above $0.30 in September 2025. Outside investors have lost about $674 million on World Liberty tokens based on the drawdown.
One reason is early-investor selling pressure. WLFI’s presale rounds priced the token at just $0.015 and $0.05, meaning early buyers sat on gains of up to 20x when trading began.
About 20% of their allocations became available in September, while the remaining 80% stayed subject to future unlock terms.
The token may also face a valuation problem. World Liberty operates products such as the USD1 stablecoin, but WLFI itself is primarily a governance token.
Buying WLFI does not give holders equity in World Liberty Financial or rights to its profits. The project’s own disclosures say tokenholders have no economic rights in the protocol or WLFI.
WLFI is not World Liberty Financial stock, a distinction that may have contributed to its sharp valuation reset after launch.
Yashu Gola is a crypto journalist and analyst with expertise in digital assets, blockchain, and macroeconomics. He provides in-depth market analysis, technical chart patterns, and insights on global economic impacts. His work bridges traditional finance and crypto, offering actionable advice and educational content. Passionate about blockchain's role in finance, he studies behavioral finance to predict memecoin trends.