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Data Contradicts the "Trump Pump": The True Main Focus is Stablecoins
The story of “Trump Crypto Empire” doesn’t hold up under scrutiny
Eric Trump posted a viral tweet—15 major accounts retweeted it, with 303,000 views—portraying the Trump family as “crypto kings” who made over $1 billion through TRUMP meme coins, NFTs, and WLFI stablecoins. But the data doesn’t support this claim. TRUMP’s peak market cap did reach $12 billion, which sounds exaggerated, but at that time ETH’s market cap was over $300 billion. Claiming USD1 “grew fastest” to $3.5 billion TVL also completely ignores the widespread adoption of USDC.
Why does this matter? The question is: Are we seeing real “relationship benefits,” or just narrative hype that regulators will shut down? The tweet received many likes and retweets about the “debanking” story, but the reply section was polarized—some praised, others called it a scam. TRUMP ranks 7th in “mind share,” but the price hasn’t kept up. After the tweet, the price fell back to $3.20, then only rebounded 2.4% to $3.28 on $162 million in volume. What kind of breakthrough is this?
The tweet tries to frame “debanking” as the origin story of crypto, linking family projects to larger policy shifts (like Bitcoin reserves, SEC regulatory changes). External sources (FT, Decrypt) confirmed over $1 billion pre-tax profit from WLFI financing (over $550 million) and meme coin fees ($427 million). But on-chain data shows no volume surge: TRUMP’s trading volume peaked at $1.38 billion on March 13, then dropped to just $131 million by March 22. This looks more like waning interest than growing conviction.
Honestly, I’m skeptical of the “Trump pump.” Since the wave where BTC hit $120,000 in October, there’s been no real causal driver. Current positions are more influenced by macro factors (like the risk of the Strait of Hormuz closing) than meme narrative noise.
Too crowded on the same side
Views are torn between “Trump crypto unstoppable” and “this is just a pump and dump.” Data sits in a lukewarm middle, suggesting selective allocation. The $3.5 billion TVL for USD1 does indicate real adoption, but after the tweet, volume didn’t expand—noise didn’t translate into capital flow. Retail sentiment feels more exhausted than excited.
Chainalysis projects crypto scams will exceed $17 billion in 2025, making Trump-related projects seem more like “anomalies” rather than representative cases. My take: Long on policy-driven stablecoins, be cautious with high-volatility meme coins. The market underestimates regulatory tailwinds and overestimates the “family all-in” narrative premium.
Conclusion: This viral tweet exposes the trap of meme narratives. Chasing TRUMP is likely crowded trading. The more covert but steadier position is in WLFI stablecoins linked to policy shifts. Institutions and builders have the advantage; retail is chasing headlines.
Judgment: It’s too late to chase TRUMP now. Stablecoin narratives driven by policy are still early for builders and institutional funds; cautious traders should reduce exposure to crowded meme coins. Long-term holders and funds should focus on WLFI-related stablecoins, which have better prospects under regulatory easing.