
A Hong Kong company called WorldClaw Limited is taking pre-orders for a computer it plans to ship in Q3 2026. The price: $9,999, or 2.5 million WLFI tokens.
That alone tells you how the company values WLFI. This is the same outfit that, alongside its products and services, sells chances to win access to a private event with Donald Trump Jr., while claiming it is "not offered, managed, or controlled in any way by World Liberty Financial LLC or its affiliates."
Do the math: if 2.5 million WLFI equals $9,999, then one WLFI is worth about $0.004. Meanwhile, CoinGecko shows a price more than 16 times higher.
So how many times is WLFI overvalued compared to the rate at which a company proudly putting the WLFI logo on its hardware is actually willing to accept it?
You could argue that this is not a payment of 2.5 million WLFI, but a lock-up. But after combing through the entire website, I couldn't find any mention of an option to unlock those tokens later. Quite the opposite - the language repeatedly frames it as a purchase.