The post Trump Denies Involvement in $500M Abu Dhabi WLFI Stake appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. US President Donald Trump has denied knowledge of a reportedThe post Trump Denies Involvement in $500M Abu Dhabi WLFI Stake appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. US President Donald Trump has denied knowledge of a reported

Trump Denies Involvement in $500M Abu Dhabi WLFI Stake

3 min read

US President Donald Trump has denied knowledge of a reported multimillion-dollar investment involving an Abu Dhabi royal and entities linked to the World Liberty Financial crypto platform, according to The Wall Street Journal.

“I don’t know about it,” Trump told reporters on Monday when asked about his involvement in the deal.

“My sons are handling that — my family is handling it,” Trump added. “I guess they get investments from different people.”

The Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday that Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, a member of the Abu Dhabi royal family in the United Arab Emirates, purchased a 49% stake in WLFI for $500 million four days before Trump was inaugurated.

The WSJ report was based on WLFI documents and comments from people familiar with the matter.

The first installment from a Tahnoon-backed company, Aryam Investment 1, was reported to be $250 million, of which $187 million was directed to Trump-family entities.

Another $31 million was directed to an entity tied to two of WLFI’s founders, Zak Folkman and Chase Herro.

The agreement would make Aryam WLFI’s largest shareholder, raising concerns over foreign influence in a US crypto company closely tied to the president, who is one of nine WLFI founders alongside his sons Donald Trump Jr., Eric, and Barron.

Related: Bitcoin hits ‘fire-sale’ value as capital flows capitulate: Bitwise 

Sheikh Tahnoon maintains diplomatic relations with the US and is the chairman of Group 42, an Abu Dhabi-based AI conglomerate that secured approval from the US Department of Commerce to purchase advanced chips from Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices in December.

Senator criticizes Trump’s crypto ties

The report of Sheikh Tahnoon’s stake in WLFI could add to regulatory and media scrutiny over Trump’s ties to crypto.

In January, Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren urged the country’s banking regulator to hold off on considering World Liberty Financial’s bid for a bank charter until Trump divests his interest in the crypto platform. 

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency later knocked back Warren’s bid, stating that no political or personal financial ties would impact the procedural review and that it would be subject to the same “rigorous review” as any application.

WLFI spokesman David Wachsman echoed a similar sentiment to Bloomberg:

Magazine: Crypto loves Clawdbot/Moltbot, Uber ratings for AI agents: AI Eye

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