- March 8, 2026
- Posted by: admin
- Category: BitCoin, Blockchain, Cryptocurrency, Investments
On Mar. 5, Justin Sun reached a $10 million settlement with the SEC to resolve a civil fraud case that alleged he generated $31 million through wash-trading-style transactions and undisclosed celebrity promotions.
The settlement, which requires court approval and includes no admission of wrongdoing, moves the case toward dismissal.
The same day, US banking regulators announced that banks won’t face additional capital charges for tokenized securities compared to traditional ones. This technology-neutral framing represents another brick removed from crypto’s regulatory wall.
Sun’s settlement lands a year into the President Donald Trump administration’s regulatory retrenchment.
In May 2025, the SEC dismissed its civil lawsuit against Binance with prejudice. In October 2025, Trump pardoned Binance founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, who had pleaded guilty in November 2023 to anti-money-laundering and unlicensed money-transmission violations, paid billions in fines, and served four months.
A House Financial Services Democrats letter from January 2026 alleges the SEC has dismissed or closed at least a dozen crypto-related cases since January 2025.
The beneficiary isn’t only the broader US crypto market. Trump’s own crypto network has positioned itself to capture outsized private gains from the distribution channels and business relationships these entrepreneurs control.

The token economics of presidential proximity
Within a year, two globally recognizable crypto entrepreneurs saw major US legal constraints ease.
Sun’s settlement clears a civil fraud case but falls short of vindication. Binance’s civil SEC dismissal came with prejudice. CZ’s pardon was clemency, not a factual reversal of his guilty plea.
Over the same period, Trump’s family-linked crypto ventures became direct beneficiaries of the renewed distribution of crypto.
Reuters calculated that the Trump Organization pulled in $802 million from crypto in the first half of 2025 alone, dwarfing other business lines, with World Liberty Financial’s token economics accounting for the largest share.
World Liberty’s Gold Paper allocates 75% of revenue from token sales to a Trump family entity after operating expenses are deducted. The stablecoin component launched in March 2025, USD1, adds another revenue stream through collateralized reserve yield, which Reuters estimated could generate tens of millions annually at scale.
Sun became one of the most prominent buyers of the World Liberty token, investing at least $75 million into the WLFI token presale and joining as an adviser.
He also participated in the TRUMP memecoin ecosystem, with reporting linking a “SUN” wallet and HTX-connected activity to substantial holdings, though attribution remains contested.
Binance’s intersection with Trump’s crypto stack runs through a different channel: Abu Dhabi-backed MGX’s $2 billion investment into Binance in March 2025, crypto’s first institutional deal of that scale.
World Liberty co-founders confirmed that USD1 was used in that MGX-Binance transaction.
Reports found roughly $2 billion in USD1 sitting in a single wallet at a time when USD1 had only $2.1 billion in total circulation, illustrating how a single pipeline dominated early supply.
By February 2026, USD1 had grown to the sixth-largest stablecoin by market cap, according to Artemis, with approximately $4.4 billion in circulation.
When USD1 briefly dipped to around $0.994 on Feb. 23 after what World Liberty called a “coordinated attack” on X accounts, the peg recovered quickly.
The concentration of early USD1 supply around the MGX-Binance corridor and subsequent growth created a distribution advantage that World Liberty’s revenue structure monetizes directly.
| Case / actor | What happened (date) | Legal effect | What it does not mean (nuance guardrail) | Where Trump-linked benefit shows up (observable overlap) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Justin Sun — SEC civil case | $10M settlement with U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission; SEC moves toward dismissal pending court approval; no admission of wrongdoing (Mar. 5, 2026) | Reduces a major civil enforcement overhang and moves the case toward closure if the court approves | Not “cleared,” not vindication; does not resolve every reputational/market-access constraint; settlement doesn’t prove intent either way | Sun is described in reporting as a prominent backer of World Liberty Financial: $WLFI presale participation (reported $75M+) and adviser role; also participated in the TRUMP memecoin ecosystem (wallet attribution contested) |
| Binance — SEC civil case | SEC dismissed with prejudice (May 2025) | Ends that SEC civil matter; “with prejudice” means it can’t be refiled | Not a finding of innocence; doesn’t erase other legal history or compliance scrutiny elsewhere | WLFI-linked USD1 became a key stablecoin in a major transaction corridor involving Binance (MGX deal); benefit channel is distribution + stablecoin usage, not a claim of quid pro quo |
| Changpeng Zhao — DOJ criminal case | Pleaded guilty (Nov 2023) → served four months → later pardoned by Trump (Oct 2025) | Pardon is clemency that can reduce ongoing criminal consequences (practical/legal constraints), depending on scope | Not an exoneration; does not reverse the fact of a guilty plea; does not automatically wipe all collateral consequences in every context | Reduced personal/legal constraints on a marquee crypto figure can expand “risk-on” participation; Trump-linked ventures benefit mechanically if distribution/flows increase into their token + stablecoin stack |
The policy-to-profit feedback loop
The business design means enforcement retreats and incremental agency guidance reduce friction.
Reduced friction increases activity, and activity monetizes Trump-linked token and stablecoin economics.
Trump didn’t have to orchestrate regulatory outcomes to be their primary private beneficiary. The overlap is mechanical: as legal overhang lifts from actors who control distribution channels, like Binance’s exchange listings or Sun’s investment capacity, the ventures that capture renewed participation benefit.
World Liberty’s token and stablecoin structure sit at precisely those junctures.
Stablecoins have moved beyond niche crypto infrastructure to become macro-relevant collateral.
A Bank for International Settlements working paper from February 2026 found that a two-standard-deviation inflow into dollar stablecoins lowered three-month Treasury bill yields by roughly 2.5 to 3.5 basis points, with effects rising to 5 to 8 basis points during bill-scarcity periods.
Stablecoin growth now generates measurable demand for safe assets, inserting these instruments into rate and Treasury plumbing.
A European Central Bank working paper documented a “deposit-substitution mechanism” where stablecoin adoption reduces retail deposits and constrains bank intermediation.
Euro-area evidence that provides a rigorous frame for why US banks fight yield-bearing stablecoin features.
This maps directly onto current US legislative gridlock. The Clarity Act hit a fresh impasse largely because banks oppose stablecoin yield features that could accelerate deposit flight and because ethics and AML provisions touching Trump-linked ventures remain contested.
The total stablecoin market cap sits at around $313 billion, with 3.7% 30-day growth, according to DeFiLlama. Even without new legislation, the US is functionally easing the cost of operating crypto businesses, while Trump’s stack is positioned as a tollbooth on distribution growth.
Second-order winners and structural constraints
The first-order private beneficiary is Trump’s crypto network. The second-order public beneficiary is the US crypto market as a whole, which gains from lower enforcement-risk premiums, faster product rollouts, and more US-facing listings.
That distinction matters because it separates correlation from causation without ignoring the observable flow of benefits. A settlement and a dismissal are not findings of innocence. A pardon is clemency, not exoneration.
Even when there’s no provable link between enforcement outcomes and private business ties, the distribution and revenue outcomes are visible and quantifiable.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins said in February 2026 that the agency is refilling jobs after earlier White House-driven cuts, and he addressed accusations that it dropped crypto cases as political favors, noting that many decisions were made before he was sworn in.
The thaw extends beyond personalities. US regulators now lean toward “exemptive relief” for tokenized securities trials, while the UK favors sandboxes, a divergence that creates cross-border friction even as US policy tilts toward accommodation.
The next constraint may not be legal, but legislative and political.
Banks view stablecoins as deposit-substitution threats. Ethics language in proposed legislation could structurally cap Trump-linked projects even as the market grows, or it could land weakly and allow them to scale faster.
Entrepreneurs who have been cleared civilly or pardoned criminally still face reputational and market-access constraints if future enforcement agencies adopt a tougher posture.
Regulatory overhang can reemerge as a policy risk rather than purely a legal risk.
Why this matters
The concentration of benefit around Trump’s crypto ventures raises conflict-of-interest questions without requiring proof of quid pro quo.
The revenue split, stablecoin reserve yields, and distribution touchpoints are all in public filings and reporting. The policy shift, with lower enforcement, incremental guidance, civil dismissals, and pardons, reduces friction.
The private capture of that reduced friction is most visible in ventures where token economics and stablecoin growth translate directly into presidential-linked income.
Trump didn’t need to be the regulatory rollback’s biggest beneficiary. The beneficiary status is observable.
As Trump-era regulators unwind legal overhangs from headline crypto figures, the clearest private upside accrues to Trump’s own token and stablecoin stack, while the broader US market is the second-order winner. That pattern holds regardless of motive, and the numbers make it legible.
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