In Brief
- Trojan integrated USD1 so Solana traders can execute and settle onchain swaps directly in the stablecoin inside Trojan’s trading terminal.
- USD1 is the flagship token of World Liberty Financial, the crypto venture co-founded by the Trump family.
Trojan, a Solana-focused trading tool best known for its Telegram bot, has added support for settling swaps in USD1, a dollar-pegged stablecoin issued by World Liberty Financial.
The integration allows Trojan users to trade Solana tokens while keeping their trading balance denominated in USD1, rather than SOL, the company said. Trojan framed the feature as a way for frequent traders—particularly those cycling through fast-moving meme and mid-cap tokens—to reduce exposure to SOL price swings while maintaining onchain, non-custodial control of funds.
Trojan has grown alongside Solana’s memecoin-driven trading boom, offering automated order types and execution tools inside chat and, more recently, via a web-based terminal. QuickNode describes Trojan as a Telegram-based Solana trading bot launched in 2022 with more than 2 million users.
USD1 is the flagship stablecoin of World Liberty Financial, a crypto venture backed by the family of U.S. President Donald Trump, and has been expanding distribution as stablecoins become a larger share of crypto market activity. World Liberty said earlier this month that USD1 has surpassed $3.3 billion in circulation in its first year.
The company has also sought to pull more of its stablecoin activity into the regulated perimeter. A World Liberty subsidiary recently filed to establish a national trust bank focused on stablecoin issuance, custody and conversions.
World Liberty markets USD1 as redeemable 1:1 for U.S. dollars and backed by dollars and U.S. government money market funds.
A reserve attestation report published by BitGo Technologies, which provides infrastructure services tied to USD1, shows the token minted and redeemed across multiple networks—including Solana—alongside Ethereum, BNB Smart Chain, Tron and Aptos as of late 2025.
The Trojan tie-up comes as stablecoin usage continues to move beyond “cash parking” and into active trading and payments. Stablecoin transaction volumes climbed to a record US$33 trillion in 2025, based on data compiled by Artemis Analytics, underscoring the sector’s growing role as settlement rails across crypto markets.
For Solana specifically, embedding USD1 into a high-frequency trading interface is aimed at making “dollar-based” execution more seamless for a cohort that often rotates positions multiple times a day. Trojan said users can denominate portfolios in USD1, rebalance without leaving the terminal and settle swaps directly in the stablecoin—features that mirror how professional traders think about P&L and risk in traditional markets, where assets are commonly priced and managed against a stable unit of account.
The move also reflects intensifying competition among Solana trading bots and terminals, which have become a key distribution layer for new tokens and liquidity pools. Industry guides tracking Solana’s Telegram trading bots list Trojan among the better-known options alongside BONKbot and others, highlighting how much retail flow has migrated to automated interfaces.
The integration puts USD1 in front of a large base of Solana-native traders at a moment when stablecoin issuers are competing not just on reserves and regulation, but on where their tokens can be used without friction.
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