WLFI approves 100% buyback and burn: impact, risks, and data
The post WLFI approves 100% buyback and burn: impact, risks, and data appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
With 99.8% of votes in favor and 100% of treasury fees allocated to buyback and burn, World Liberty Financial (WLFI) attempts a relaunch after an underwhelming debut. In this context, the governance has chosen a clear path. According to data collected from on-chain explorers and analysis dashboards, the initial transactions related to buybacks and burns are traceable and public, allowing for independent verification of the operations. Industry analysts note that the effectiveness of the measure will depend on the consistency of the fees, the frequency of execution, and the market depth. The measure channels all protocol revenues towards the reduction of the circulating supply, with the aim of building more structural support for the price, while the community embraces an aggressive strategy oriented towards scarcity. It must be said that success will depend on the pace and quality of execution. Data updated as of September 19, 2025. However, a crucial issue remains: without official estimates on the expected fees, the real impact will depend on volumes, execution, and on‑chain transparency. That said, the first signals will come from the cadence and size of the buybacks. What happened: governance approves 100% buyback and burn of WLFI Fee allocation: 100% of the treasury fees will be used for WLFI buybacks and subsequent burning, with no deviations towards other spending lines. Vote outcome: the initiative received 99.8% favorable votes, with an almost negligible minority, indicating a very broad consensus. Timing: the decision was approved a few weeks after the token’s launch, which took place at the beginning of September. The mandate is clear: convert the fees collected on multiple networks into WLFI and remove them permanently from circulation. The strategy emphasizes supply discipline over other possible uses of the treasury, de-emphasizing alternative expenditures. How it works operationally The protocol collects fees from liquidity…
Filed under: News - @ September 19, 2025 6:30 pm