Dropped from 73 to 1.7, 980,000 people lost 3.8 billion, and the market maker made 1.4 billion——



TRUMP coin’s one-year anniversary: who is the real sucker?

TRUMP coin is one year old. It has fallen from $73 to $1.7 now, a 97% drop; 989,000 wallets are in the red, with a total unrealized loss of $3.8 billion.

How much did parties related to TRUMP make? $1.4 billion.

Yes, you read that right. A group of people lost $3.8 billion, while the founder made $1.4 billion. This is probably the biggest-scale fan-economy disaster in human history—more ruthless than any concert ticket scam.

When you bought TRUMP back then, did you really believe it would rise to $1,000?

You didn’t buy faith—you bought FOMO. It was when you watched it skyrocket the moment it went live, doubled within three days, and the whole internet was shouting “Make Crypto Great Again,” and you feared missing the next wave of sudden wealth.

You were betting on traffic; they were selling traffic monetization.

The smartest thing about the TRUMP project isn’t how high the coin price can be pushed—it’s that it precisely hit the intersection of “political fanatics + speculative gamblers.” The $73 top was exactly the highest point of the most intense emotion. And then what? An entire stretch of slow bleeding, like boiling a frog in warm water—so that the vast majority of people wouldn’t bring themselves to cut their losses, holding all the way until now.

490,000 wallets are making money, with profits totaling $4 billion. Who are these people? It’s the batch that bought in below $1 during the early issuance phase—that is, the information-advantaged group that entered at the same time as the project team. They’re insiders, early whitelist holders, and players who know when to pump and when to unload.

Meme coins never create wealth; they only transfer it. From the hands of 989,000 wallets, it was transferred to 490,000 early players and the project team. TRUMP’s $1.4 billion is, in essence, money taken out of your pockets.

Someone may say: “They issue a token—what’s wrong with making some money?”

Nothing’s wrong. But don’t dress it up with a narrative about “letting ordinary people turn their lives around.”

TRUMP coin is the most nakedly obvious Meme coin—it can’t even be bothered to write a whitepaper, it has no roadmap, and its biggest “utility” is just Trump’s name. It has “I’m here to harvest suckers” written all over it, and yet you still rushed in.

This isn’t the project team’s problem. It’s your own choice to be a sucker.

The same thing is playing out again on WLFI—85% of secondary buyers are in losses, with a cumulative loss of $83 million. Same team, same recipe, the same batch of victims.

“The top of meme coins is always prepared for people with FOMO. And the bottom is left as a fantasy for the next bagholder.”

TRUMP coin dropped from 73 to 1.7, and 980,000 people lost $3.8 billion. This tells us a simple truth: when a president’s name is printed on a coin, it doesn’t mean he’s standing with you. His wallet is together—but you’re never in that wallet. #gStocks代币化股票上线 #非农爆冷打压加息预期 #ETH突破1700 $BTC $TRUMP $WLFI
BTC0.38%
TRUMP-3.78%
WLFI3.88%
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