World Liberty Financial approaches federal banking status
World Liberty Financial — the cryptocurrency firm co-founded by President Trump and his sons Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump, and Barron Trump — is expected in the coming weeks to receive a national trust bank charter from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, according to a June 2026 report by NOTUS.
Two former OCC staffers, speaking anonymously, told NOTUS that approval is 'all but guaranteed' and that a rejection would be 'inconceivable.' The firm applied for the charter on January 5, 2026.
If approved, World Liberty Financial would operate as 'World Liberty Trust Company' — able to issue and redeem its USD1 stablecoin independently, manage reserves, and custody digital assets without going through an intermediary like BitGo, its current partner.
What the OCC charter means
A federal trust bank charter is a significant regulatory upgrade. It allows a company to preempt state regulations, issue stablecoins directly to the public, and offer custody and conversion services under a single federal regulatory framework.
The OCC under Trump-appointed Comptroller Jonathan Gould has already granted conditional approvals to Circle, Ripple, BitGo, Paxos, Fidelity Digital Assets, Coinbase, and Bridge (a Stripe-owned platform). Gould has dramatically cut approval wait times from up to two years to 120 days.
For World Liberty Financial, the charter would primarily enhance its USD1 stablecoin operation. USD1 grew faster in its first year than any other stablecoin in history, according to co-founder Zach Witkoff, and is already being used by institutions for cross-border payments and settlement.
The conflict of interest debate
The charter application has drawn sharp criticism. Corey Frayer, director of investor protection for the Consumer Federation of America and a former Democratic Senate Banking Committee aide, said: 'For the first time in history, a president is leaning on a bank regulator to give his private enterprise the implicit backing of the federal government. It's outrageous.'
Senator Elizabeth Warren issued a statement calling it 'unprecedented crypto corruption metastasized to the banking system,' arguing the OCC's review is a 'sham' given that Gould serves at the pleasure of Trump — the same president who co-founded the firm seeking the charter.
Reuters estimated in a June 2026 analysis that the Trump family has generated at least $2.3 billion in profit from crypto ventures since Trump retook the presidency, with World Liberty Financial accounting for the largest share.
World Liberty's response
World Liberty Financial's spokesperson David Wachsman stated that Trump 'has had no involvement in World Liberty Financial since taking office' and that none of its leadership or employees work for the U.S. government.
Zach Witkoff argued the firm structured its trust entity 'intentionally' to avoid conflicts of interest, with Trump and family members not serving as executives or exercising day-to-day control. Wachsman added that OCC approval would subject the firm to 'robust and permanent regulatory oversight' including anti-money laundering rules and consumer protection statutes.
Why this connects to the $250 bill narrative
The World Liberty Financial bank charter story and the $250 bill story share a common thread: the unprecedented entanglement of a sitting U.S. president with the nation's monetary infrastructure. In one story, Trump's face may appear on currency. In the other, Trump's company may become a federally chartered bank.
Both stories feed the same broad narrative about Trump's relationship with U.S. money — and both generate the sustained press coverage that has driven 131 verified outlets to cover the $250 bill story and its surrounding context.