A stablecoin associated with entities linked to former US President Donald Trump is extending its footprint across decentralized finance through a new partnership with Enso. The firm, known for building so-called chain shortcuts that allow projects to deploy liquidity and functionality across multiple blockchains without bespoke integrations, disclosed that the stablecoin USD1, has become the latest asset to sit atop its infrastructure stack.
Enso’s founder conveyed that the firm views this rollout as a way to make decentralized finance more appealing to larger actors, including regulated institutions, by helping them access deeper liquidity pools and more efficient execution environments. USD1, issued by World Liberty Financial — a component of the broader crypto conglomerate backed by the Trump family — entered circulation in March and has been scaling at pace.
Stablecoin surge continues under favorable US policy
USD1’s trajectory forms part of a broader upswing in the stablecoin asset class in 2025. The category has climbed beyond 308 billion dollars in aggregate capitalization, marking a more than fifty percent expansion year-to-date. That acceleration has been widely linked to a friendlier domestic policy posture. In July, Trump enacted the Genius Act, a federal law that granted formal legal standing to stablecoins in the United States. Commentators expect the market to continue compounding in size.
Research teams at Keyrock and Bitso have projected that stablecoins could represent roughly twelve percent of all global payments by the year 2030, an estimate that underscores expectations that tokenized dollars may evolve into a mainstream settlement rail over the coming decade.
This is how the next era of money scales.
Institutional-grade liquidity — composable, connected, and live on Dolomite via @EnsoBuild. https://t.co/wXugQBF6Jd
— Dolomite 🏔️ (@Dolomite_io) October 27, 2025
Liquidity routing across chains and protocols
Enso stated that its objective is to drive USD1 toward ubiquity across onchain environments by helping distribute its liquidity into a broad range of protocols on multiple chains. Its public materials list more than 250 supported protocols that collectively have handled more than 17 billion dollars in onchain transaction volume.
A new era of money is here. And USD1 is the stablecoin fueling it.
USD1 by @worldlibertyfi, now over $2.7B in circulation, is expanding across crypto through Enso infrastructure. Live on @Dolomite_io.
The line between TradFi and DeFi disappeared. Web 2.5 is here. pic.twitter.com/8WB8YgrTgg
— Enso | ⌘ 🛠️ (@EnsoBuild) October 27, 2025
USD1 currently holds a market capitalization near 3 billion dollars, placing it as the sixth-largest stablecoin globally. Nearly seventy percent of its liquidity is concentrated on BNB Chain — a network associated with exchange operator Binance, whose founder Changpeng Zhao received a presidential pardon the prior week. Approximately a quarter of USD1 liquidity resides on Ethereum, with the balance dispersed across networks such as Solana, Tron and Aptos.
Expanded utility through DeFi integrations
Under the Enso integration, USD1 is expected to become accessible within protocols, including Dolomite, a margin trading venue, allowing users to trade, borrow, lend, and transport the stablecoin fluidly across chains. Market participants interpreted the move as evidence that the team behind USD1 is accelerating efforts to embed the token across core DeFi rails rather than leaving liquidity clustered in a handful of silos.
Analysts following the sector suggested that if routing infrastructure such as Enso’s succeeds in normalizing multi-chain liquidity distribution for large stablecoins, the result could be an increase in depth, composability, and institutional participation across decentralized markets. The USD1 expansion was framed as part of a broader maturation trend in which politically backed or institutionally aligned stablecoins seek to entrench themselves as foundational collateral inside the DeFi stack.








