Our experts told us how PEPE new token appeared on major cryptocurrency exchanges in three weeks of existence. And resulted in the appearance of dozens of analogs, and who made money from it
In early April, the @pepecoineth account appeared on Twitter. And the only entry in which was an image of the famous meme with Pepe the frog wearing a red cap with the inscription “Make Memecoins Great Again”. So say this is a similar slogan to former U.S. President Donald Trump’s presidential slogan.
Two weeks later, the cryptocurrency token PEPE was launched, taking its name from a popular meme. Anonymous developers issued 420.69 trillion coins. And token trading was launched on the decentralized exchange Uniswap.
The discussion of PEPE was picked up by Influencers on Twitter and in the thematic channels of the messengers Telegram and Discord. And just one day after its debut, its price rose by more than 900%. In less than three weeks, the market capitalization of this memcoin exceeded $1.6 billion. At the time of our publication, the token is among the top three memcoins, second only to Dogecoin (DOGE) and Shiba Inu (SHIB).
High demand for meme coins
This rise in Pepe quickly led to the emergence of dozens of new memcoins. And those of them that turned out to be rumored also skyrocketed in price by tens or even hundreds of percent. Many of these tokens lack liquidity. This means that traders have limited ability to buy and sell them close to the market rate. Because of this, tokens are susceptible to sharp price fluctuations. And any of the relatively large buy orders pushes their prices higher and vice versa. Professional traders take advantage of this, whose bots can track such bids to their completion. And put their own ahead of the other players.
The PEPE token was initially traded only on decentralized crypto exchanges. And the increase in trading volume on which leads to an increase in the number of transactions on the Ethereum blockchain. During the hype surrounding PEPE and other meme tokens, activity on Uniswap and peers grew to the 2021 mark. When Bitcoin and the crypto market as a whole reached historic price highs. This, in turn, led to an increased load on the network. And as a consequence, Ethereum’s commissions increased dramatically. Now buying memcoins on DEX or any other direct interaction with the network can cost up to $50 in ETH cryptocurrency.
High commissions, as well as technical peculiarities of decentralized exchanges, partly deterred the influx of ordinary retail traders. But realizing the scale of the excitement, traditional crypto-exchanges began to announce PEPE listings. Among them are OKX, Bybit, KuCoin, Poloniex, Bitget and others. BitMEX was the first exchange to launch trading in perpetual PEPE futures with up to 50x leverage.
PEPE listing on Binance
The world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, Binance, held back for a while. But at the beginning of May, its head Changpeng Zhao told during a question-and-answer session with subscribers. That even though he doesn’t understand memcoins himself. And has never traded them, if there is a demand, his platform always goes towards users. It became clear in the cryptocurrency community that listing PEPE on Binance is a matter of time. And the exchange did add the token a few days later.
According to CoinMarketCap, PEPE trading volumes from May 9 to 10 exceeded $420 million, despite the token’s price drop. The service’s statistics also show that trading volumes quickly moved from Uniswap to Binance. More than $160 million worth of PEPE trades were made on Binance in a day, compared to $55 million on Uniswap. The accessible interface and much lower fixed commissions obviously played a role in this. According to DEXTools analytics service the number of unique PEPE token holders exceeded 100 thousand on May 10.
Not just a meme
In 2005, illustrator Matt Furey released a webcomic called Boy’s Club. And it featured a frog named Pepe. The character appeared frequently in Furey’s work. And then migrated to the Internet and spawned thousands of memes. Fury himself, answering his subscribers’ questions, said he knew nothing about this token. And ironically called himself a “Dogecoin maximalist.
Dogecoin, created in late 2013 by developers Billy Marcus and Jackson Palmer, was the first memcoin to hit the market. According to them, they created the coin as a joke. And its name was a reference to the popular meme “doge” with a shiba-inu dog named Kabosu. Unlike Bitcoin’s payment function or Ethereum’s decentralized application ecosystem. Then Dogecoin originally had no purpose other than to irony the nascent crypto market of the time.
That hasn’t stopped the coin from skyrocketing in popularity, helped heavily by Tesla CEO Elon Musk. According to CoinMarketCap, Dogecoin has a market capitalization of more than $10 billion. After the rapid growth of DOGE in 2021, a flood of memcoins flooded the market. Including Shiba Inu, another dog-inspired meme token and one of the top 20 largest crypto assets.
The activity and excitement around PEPE is partly reminiscent of the recent rise of BONK. It is another memcoin with a siba-inu as a symbol, launched earlier this year on the Solana blockchain. During the New Year holidays, the token soared in price in a similar way. And provoked a surge of abnormal activity on decentralized exchanges. And it was added to the listing of major trading floors, including Bybit and Huobi. After the January highs, the price of BONK never returned to its peak values. And gradually declined despite the overall growth of the market.
Dog memes are no longer popular ?
“The dogs have had their day,” the developers of PEPE wrote, “it’s time for Pepe to take over”. The creators of the token run it socially anonymously. And the coin’s website lacks any contact information. The first press release mentioning PEPE was published April 19 on behalf of David Costla. Another press release about the creation of another memcoin, DanGPT, the “daring twin of ChatGPT,” is signed by the same name. The developers have ignored attempts by journalists to contact them through any available channels.
Our experts point out that when Elon Musk posted a meme on Twitter with an image of NFT from the Milady collection. That the rate of Milady Meme Coin (LADYS) token, created the day before, increased almost 120 times. The capitalization of the coin reached $136 million in less than a day. Blockchain transaction researchers noticed that the owners of some Ethereum wallets, which earned hundreds of thousands of dollars on the growth of the PEPE rate. And they were also buying up LADYS in advance of the new token’s price jump.
So we can safely say no matter what meme the crypto project is dedicated to. If there is hype around it, it will grow in price, but it won’t last long. Be careful investing money in such coins can lead to significant financial losses.