MemeCore token shed over 75% in 24 hours amid revelations that insiders held over 90% of its supply, raising serious market integrity concerns.MemeCore token shed over 75% in 24 hours amid revelations that insiders held over 90% of its supply, raising serious market integrity concerns.

MemeCore Plunges 75% as Insider Supply Control Raises Red Flags

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com
trading-chart12345-1 main

When a meme token hits a $6 billion valuation and insiders control more than 90% of the supply, the math collapses fast. That’s exactly what happened to MemeCore (M) this week, as the token lost over 75% in 24 hours, settling near $0.67 on OKX. The plunge, captured in the market update, exposed how severely distorted supply dynamics can wreck a token’s price once questions about insider holdings reach the open market.

The selloff didn’t emerge from a protocol hack or a flawed smart contract. It came from the oldest fear in crypto markets: a handful of insiders sitting on nearly all the tokens. MemeCore’s $6 billion market cap — a number that briefly made it one of the more visible meme assets — rested on a supply distribution that many traders now view as a time bomb. When that concentration became public discourse, liquidity evaporated and the price collapsed, leaving retail holders with steep losses.

Supply Centralization Destroys Price Trust

High insider concentration undermines price discovery because the float is effectively imaginary. If insiders hold over 90% of the supply, the tokens actually circulating on exchanges are a fraction of the reported market cap. That creates an illusion of value that can vanish the moment one or two large wallets decide to sell. In MemeCore’s case, the mere discussion of who controls the supply triggered aggressive de-risking. Sellers raced each other down the order book, and the bid side thinned to almost nothing during the worst stretches of the drop.

This dynamic is not unique to MemeCore. Many meme coins and freshly listed tokens have similar structures, but a $6 billion valuation amplifies the stakes. Traders who treat on-chain supply analysis as optional end up holding the bag. The episode also raises questions about whether exchanges should require transparent token distribution disclosures before listing. Without that, traders are gambling on a structure they cannot see, and the payoff structure is often stacked against them. The breakdown in trust feeds directly into the broader concerns that have accompanied the rapid expansion of tokenized markets, even as tokenization markets reached new milestones in recent weeks.

Exchange Dynamics and Regulatory Blind Spots

MemeCore traded on OKX, a major global exchange that has generally avoided the worst of the unvetted token listing controversies. Yet the sudden collapse hints at a persistent gap: trading platforms still list assets whose supply distribution is opaque or unverified. Even if an exchange performs due diligence, it may not detect concentrated insider wallets if those wallets are spread across dozens of addresses or cloaked through intermediary transactions.

The timing is notable. US lawmakers are currently debating a sweeping crypto market structure bill, and banks are trying to kill the biggest crypto bill in US history just days before a Senate vote. If that legislation passes in weakened form, the burden of policing token supply concentration will fall entirely on exchanges and self-regulatory bodies. Incidents like MemeCore’s crash could become ammunition for regulators who want tighter controls, arguing that exchange vetting standards are insufficient when billions of dollars in notional value evaporate in a few hours. For now, the U.S. regulatory response to such altcoin collapses remains fragmented, and the window for voluntary market discipline is closing.

Altcoin Mania Meets a Liquidity Reckoning

MemeCore’s collapse also lands in the middle of a volatile week for altcoins. While some tokens were posting triple-digit gains, MemeCore cratered, highlighting the extreme bipolarity in the meme coin sector. This week’s top crypto gainers surged on partnerships and institutional demand, but MemeCore fell apart on supply concentration fears — two sides of a market that still lacks consistent risk pricing.

What remains uncertain is whether MemeCore’s insiders have already sold or are merely waiting for a bounce to exit. On-chain sleuths will be watching large wallet movements closely. If those wallets remain static, the token could see a sharp recovery driven by speculators chasing a dead cat bounce. If they start moving, the remaining market cap could drain faster than it did on the initial 75% drop. In either case, the episode serves as a reminder that meme coin valuations built on hidden supply are not real valuations. They are theater. And when the curtain lifts, the selloff is rarely orderly.

Market Opportunity
RedStone Logo
RedStone Price(RED)
$0.09017
$0.09017$0.09017
+1.20%
USD
RedStone (RED) Live Price Chart

CHZ +28%! Will History Repeat?

CHZ +28%! Will History Repeat?CHZ +28%! Will History Repeat?

0-fee opening long & short. Be ready for any move!

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

World Cup Combo: Aim for 200x

World Cup Combo: Aim for 200xWorld Cup Combo: Aim for 200x

Combine up to 20 World Cup matches in one order