Friday, June 6

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Pump.fun is launching a token. Maybe you’ve heard? Blockworks first reported yesterday that the memecoin launchpad is looking to raise an eye-watering $1 billion at a $4 billion valuation via a token sale.

The timing has raised a few eyebrows, with some industry watchers noting that the launch follows a cooling in platform activity from its January peak. At that time, bonding curve volume topped $10 billion, revenue approached $150 million, and nearly 1.7 million tokens per month were launched. Those figures have all dropped by more than half.

To some, it seems that pump.fun rode a euphoric wave of speculative mania, and now it’s converting that attention into capital while the window’s still open. Opportunism in crypto? Say it isn’t so.

The resulting skepticism may account in part for the market’s sharp reaction following the token rumors.

Solana (SOL) fell 3% on the pump.fun token news and has slid roughly 7% over the week, from recent highs near $170 down to around $156 at the time of publication.

Some on social media cite memecoin fatigue. Intraday swings showed heightened volatility, underscoring uncertainty amid heavy retail speculation.

But is this cynicism a bit unfair?

Perhaps. It’s not hard to argue that pump.fun has earned its moment: The platform bootstrapped its early growth with very limited VC backing and popularized a novel product that brought thousands of new users to Solana.

Looking at the data, Blockworks Research shows that pump.fun’s bonding curve and AMM products routinely generated between $150m and $250m in daily trading volume, with platform fees peaking above $2m per day during May. The majority of trades remain small in size (often under $100), suggesting continued high-frequency activity from retail participants.

On the token side, pump.fun has been responsible for the vast majority of new token launches on Solana in recent months, with spikes of 30,000-40,000 launches per day observed in early May.

This onboarding funnel fed into a broader explosion of Solana usage.

And while it’s true that wallet funnel data shows that only a minority of pump.fun participants go on to use core Solana infrastructure, those who do often move into Jupiter trading, Raydium LPing and experimental dapps, suggesting real (if limited) downstream conversion.

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