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Trump Crypto Ally Justin Sun Says His World Liberty Tokens Were Frozen

Justin Sun, the China-born crypto entrepreneur and major backer of Donald Trump’s World Liberty Financial ($WLFI), said Friday that his tokens tied to the project were “unreasonably frozen.” Sun has invested at least $75 million in WLFI, making him the second-largest known investor after the Trump family, whose stake has already generated hundreds of millions in profits.

Sun did not disclose how many tokens were blocked or who initiated the freeze. Blockchain data from analytics firm Nansen shows that a World Liberty “guardian address” blacklisted a wallet controlled by Sun on Thursday, locking around 545 million WLFI tokens. He had earlier moved 50 million tokens out of that wallet.

World Liberty responded vaguely, saying it does not “seek to blacklist anyone” but will act against “malicious or high-risk activity.” Sun’s firm Tron confirmed that he and the WLFI team were in “active communication.” Despite the dispute, Sun said he planned to buy another $20 million worth of WLFI-related assets, including $10 million in new tokens.

The controversy highlights the tangled business ties between Trump’s political family and crypto ventures. Sun has regularly appeared alongside Eric Trump at crypto conferences, while promoting World Liberty’s projects through his platforms. The Trump family’s involvement in WLFI—at a time when the president is publicly backing crypto—has fueled concerns about conflicts of interest, particularly as some business partners, including Sun, face regulatory scrutiny.

The U.S. SEC still has a civil fraud case pending against Sun, though reports suggest the Trump administration is exploring a settlement. Meanwhile, WLFI’s token value has dropped sharply, sliding from above 30 cents at launch to around 18 cents on Friday.

Google Fined $3.45 Billion by EU for Antitrust Breaches in Adtech; Trump Threatens Retaliation

Google (Alphabet) has been fined €2.95 billion ($3.45 billion) by the European Union for abusing its dominance in the online advertising technology market, marking the fourth major EU penalty against the company in a decade.

The European Commission found that since 2014, Google unfairly favored its own adtech services, particularly its AdX exchange, to the detriment of rivals and online publishers. The watchdog ordered Google to end these self-preferencing practices and address conflicts of interest, warning that stronger remedies, including potential divestitures, remain on the table if compliance efforts fall short. Google has 60 days to propose changes and another 30 days to implement them.

U.S. President Donald Trump blasted the fine as “unfair” and “discriminatory,” threatening to launch a Section 301 trade investigation that could nullify EU penalties and impose retaliatory tariffs. “We cannot let this happen to brilliant American ingenuity,” Trump said, vowing to confront the EU directly.

Google said it would appeal, arguing the decision is “wrong” and would harm European businesses that rely on its services to generate ad revenue. “There’s nothing anticompetitive in providing services for ad buyers and sellers, and there are more alternatives than ever,” said Lee-Anne Mulholland, Google’s VP of regulatory affairs.

The fine comes amid mounting U.S.-EU trade tensions, with Brussels under pressure to balance antitrust enforcement with the risk of Trump’s tariff retaliation on European exports, including cars. While the Commission stopped short of ordering a breakup, critics—including the European Publishers Council—warned that fines alone would not curb Google’s dominance in the €120 billion adtech market.

The ruling adds to Google’s history of penalties in Europe: €4.3 billion in 2018, €2.42 billion in 2017, and €1.49 billion in 2019. Meanwhile, Google faces a U.S. trial in September to determine remedies in a Justice Department case that found it illegally monopolized online advertising.

Google’s advertising business remains the backbone of its revenue, generating $264.6 billion in 2024 (75.6% of total sales) across services including YouTube, Gmail, Maps, and Google Play.

Texas Instruments Warns of Cooling Demand After Tariff-Driven Surge

Texas Instruments (TXN.O) said on Thursday that customer demand has slowed following a sharp spike in April, when buyers rushed to place orders ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcement. Shares of the chipmaker fell nearly 4% after the update, delivered at the Citi Global TMT Conference by Chief Financial Officer Rafael Lizardi.

Lizardi explained that January-to-April demand was temporarily lifted by tariff-related market dynamics but noted that “things did slow down after April, or at least didn’t grow as they normally would have.”

The finance chief also addressed speculation about potential government stakes in semiconductor firms, clarifying that TI has not been approached about equity participation in exchange for CHIPS Act incentives. The Trump administration’s decision to take a 9.9% stake in Intel (INTC.O) has fueled debate about government involvement in the industry, but Lizardi said, “Nothing along those lines has been discussed or proposed” for TI.

Under the CHIPS and Science Act, the Commerce Department has earmarked up to $1.6 billion in funding for Texas Instruments. Lizardi said the agreement, initially signed under the Biden administration and later adjusted under Trump, saw only “minor, favorable changes.”

TI’s free cash flow remains under pressure from elevated capital expenditure, with share repurchases continuing but at a reduced pace. In July, the company issued a profit forecast that signaled weaker-than-expected demand for its analog chips, particularly from the automotive sector, which has been slow to rebound. Despite challenges, TI reiterated that four of its five end markets are showing recovery, with autos lagging due to broader economic uncertainty.