Closely monitoring the WLFI situation over the past few days. The technical pattern forming on the 4-hour chart looks quite concerning – we’re seeing a classic bearish flag that could lead the price to drop about 20% until it reaches around $0.066 if the pattern confirms. But what really caught my attention was the on-chain activity I discovered by analyzing the data.



Wallets linked to the project deposited between 3 to 5 billion WLFI tokens as collateral in lending protocols to borrow about $75 million in stablecoins. This is a classic sign of fragility – you’re basically using your own illiquid token as collateral to get real money. If the price drops, the entire structure collapses. It got worse when I saw that over $40 million WLFI was moved to a major exchange, leaving the pool utilization at 93%. That’s quite tight.

There’s one more thing causing significant concern in the community. There’s a lockup of over 16 billion WLFI tokens from public allocations that are still frozen. When this hits the market, the dilution will be brutal. I remembered the problems we saw with Luna crypto before – when you combine technical pressure with massive unlocks and questionable governance, the outcome tends to be pretty ugly.

And then comes the governance part. Justin Sun, the guy from Tron, who supposedly invested heavily in the project, started publicly complaining that the contract has a hidden blacklist function that nobody really knew about. Basically, someone could freeze your funds without warning. This touches on the core of what should be decentralized and transparent.

In the short term, I’ll be watching whether WLFI can break above $0.081 or if it will complete this downward pattern. On the liquidity side, any sudden move could trigger a very unpleasant liquidation cycle. The coming weeks will be decisive in understanding whether this project can recover or if concerns about control and dilution will dominate the narrative.
WLFI-2.97%
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