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Solana’s Dark Side: Rug Pulls Wipe Out Altcoin Investors

Solana’s Dark Side: Rug Pulls Wipe Out Altcoin Investors

Author:
CoinTurk
Published:
2025-05-11 14:03:09
11
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Another day, another crypto project vanishes with the money—this time on Solana. The ’decentralized’ dream looks more like a free-for-all exit strategy for devs.

How it happens: Teams hype a token, liquidity gets locked (or so they claim), then—poof—wallets drain overnight. Classic rug pull, but with Solana’s speed, the damage happens faster.

The irony? These scams thrive on the same low fees and high throughput that legitimate projects brag about. Maybe ’efficiency’ isn’t always a virtue in Wild West crypto markets.

Closing thought: If the SEC doesn’t get you, the anonymous dev with a copy-pasted whitepaper just might. Buyer beware—DYOR has never been more literal.

$172 Blockchain. According to a Solidus Labs report, over seven million altcoins created via this platform between January 2024 and March 2025 had only a 1.4% survival rate. The remaining 98.6% turned into classic rug-pull or pump-and-dump schemes, adversely affecting investors. Pump.fun became a hub for coin speculation, lured by Solana’s low transaction fees and user-friendly DEX interface.

ContentsPump.fun Report Reveals Startling DataExpected Outcome: Pump.fun Faces Legal Troubles

Pump.fun Report Reveals Startling Data

Altcoins traded on Pump.fun showed a daily volume exceeding 100 million dollars, with the report indicating that this activity was primarily fueled by short-term profit seekers. Pine Analytics’ research, covering the same period, highlighted a practice known as “same-block sniping,” where transactions occur within the same block as coin issuance, giving creators an advantage. On Raydium DEX, 93% of the examined 388,000 liquidity pools showed sudden liquidity withdrawal activities.

Solidus Labs’ meticulous analysis revealed that of the 7,050,000 coins generated on Pump.fun with at least five transactions, only 97,000 managed liquidity over a thousand dollars. The rest, at 98.6%, quickly lost value, resembling Ponzi-like structures. This scenario demonstrates the exploitation of the platform’s user-friendly interface and low fee policy.

For altcoin creators, the platform’s automated market Maker (AMM) model and its bonding curve caused prices to multiply with each purchase, allowing early entrants to gain high returns while subsequent participants suffered losses. This imbalance, growing with the site’s popularity, increased the number of victims.

In January, Pump.fun faced two class-action lawsuits, accused of violating U.S. securities laws. The complaints emphasized unregistered coin offerings and a roughly 500 million-dollar fee imposition, shaking investor confidence.

In December, due to creators’ offensive live streams to pump prices, Pump.fun temporarily suspended its broadcasting features. Following this move, the platform’s weekly revenue plummeted from 22 million dollars to nearly zero. On-chain data shows a direct correlation between this revenue crash and the regulatory action.

Experts advise more caution against traps formed by sudden liquidity withdrawals and unlimited coin creation. The pervasive fraud wave within the solana ecosystem necessitates regulators and exchange platforms to reassess their oversight mechanisms.

You can follow our news on Telegram, Facebook, Twitter & Coinmarketcap Disclaimer: The information contained in this article does not constitute investment advice. Investors should be aware that cryptocurrencies carry high volatility and therefore risk, and should conduct their own research.

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