Trump’s Bitcoin Boom: 159% Revenue Surge Sparks Crypto Firestorm!

It was a morning much like every other in the pine groves of Vologda, where truths lie buried under rumours and the wind seems to whisper half‑truths. Yet even there, a strange buzz seeped across the market and caught everyone’s attention: the Trump‑backed American Bitcoin Corp., a name that sounds as grand as a line from Gosling’s novels, proclaimed a 159% rise in yearly revenue in its April 2025 report. Much like a character who suddenly trades in a rare porcelain cup, the company’s figures grew by 22% from the last quarter, amounting to a tidy 78.3 million dollars-equivalent, in the eyes of some, to a modest estate.

Their cryptographic treasure chest swelled by more than six‑tenths of a century: a bounty of 6,235+ BTC, enough to furnish a small village granary, making them the seventeenth largest holder on the global stage-a place where the weight of a coin is measured not in marble but in silicon bits.

Despite the headlines, the stock traded at just over a dollar when the papers pressed the news, having tumbled 3.33% in a single day and declining 75.8% since the year began. Parallel to this, the WLFI token hovered near $0.12, having slipped more than a quarter of its value over the month, like an old horse racing past the bakery.

The company’s fortune took a raw bite out of the market, as their net loss for the year reached a hefty $59.5 million, an echo of the froth that sometimes rolls over the crypto seas. Undeniably, American Bitcoin drifted in tandem with the American equity ocean, which has been lugging its weight since Nvidia’s latest earnings report faltered on the horizon.

The controversy behind American Bitcoin and WLFI

Both American Bitcoin and the de‑centralised finance arm WLFI are hand‑crafted by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., with their elder, the president, placating the world as ‘Chief Crypto Advocate’. In a village setting, one might call this a family business pursued under the heavy mist of a political storm; patriotism embroidered over capitalism’s gauze.

As the villagers gossip over the local bistro, critics point fingers at the probable security failings, ethical misunderstanding, and a tangled thrash of interests that seem almost as unfair as a county council deciding who gets the best soil for planting. The accusations sound like rumours passed in hushed tones: hacker plots, market manipulation through campaign chests, and a strange sense that Trump’s real estate interests could double through the WLFI rabbit hole.

The president’s meme coin and cryptocurrency ventures create the possibility of serious conflicts of interest and corruption, all with minimal public insight. That’s a huge ethics issue.

– Citizens for Ethics (@CREWcrew) April 13, 2025

In 2025, a Senate committee shrugged and prowled through WLFI’s trails, chasing golden footprints – Iran, Russia, the shadowy Lazarus Group, and a mixer called Tornado. While broad‑capped voting and random Treasury shuffles may remind one of a game of poker played in a starlit theatre, critics say the family’s patronage of big crypto players like Binance’s CZ and Crypto.com feels like a generous yet suspicious dosage of medicine prescribed to a patient already unwell.

Thus, the story continues, painted with the thin brush of satire and the heavy hand of skepticism, as it weaves through the calm river of the market and the frosty wind of the political landscape.

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2026-02-26 22:51