The wild rise and sharp collapse of YZY Coin has once again put celebrity-linked crypto tokens under scrutiny.
Initially launched as a memecoin tied to rapper Ye (formerly Kanye West), YZY skyrocketed to a $3 billion market cap within 40 minutes – only to shed nearly 23% in a single day, leaving thousands of traders in the red.
Over 60% of wallets trading YZY Coin lost money, according to blockchain researcher Defoissia, with some suffering six-figure losses.
While early insiders made outsized profits – including a whale wallet now sitting on an $8.29M unrealized gain – retail buyers faced a highly concentrated and manipulated token economy. Only 10% of supply was allocated to liquidity.
Even Andrew Tate joined the action, pocketing $16K on a 3x short, though his long-term crypto record remains poor.
As traders search for safer meme coin bets, one Solana project is gaining traction: Wall Street Pepe. With multichain burns and public liquidity backing, it’s being pitched as a smarter alternative.
Over 60% of YZY Traders Lost Money – While Insiders Cashed Out
The fallout from YZY Coin’s launch has been brutal. Out of 56,050 wallets that interacted with the token in a single day, more than half lost money – most holding losses under $500, but several with five-figure hits. One unlucky trader reportedly lost over $1 million in a single trade.
Meanwhile, blockchain data shows that just two wallets extracted nearly $23 million across YZY and LIBRA launches, using near-identical timing strategies that suggest early contract access.
One wallet (labeled 6MNWV8) spent $450K to acquire 1.29M YZY tokens before launch, then flipped most of them for $1.39M.
These moves have triggered fresh warnings from researchers and regulators about predatory token structures and insider-driven market manipulation.
YZY’s Tokenomics Spark Manipulation Concerns
YZY Coin’s distribution model put 70% of tokens into Yeezy Investments LLC and just 10% into liquidity – a structure that critics say created artificial scarcity and enabled whale wallets to set the price floor.
A single multisig wallet controlled over 87% of the supply at launch. Early access to contract deployment – including a 1-in-25 chance snipe address – indicates the public launch was far from decentralized.
One whale wallet that bought 2.67M YZY for 12,170 SOL (about $2.28M) is still holding tokens now worth over $8.29M.
These figures mirror the LIBRA token launch pattern, where a handful of wallets extracted millions.
The same treasury wallet involved in LIBRA reappeared during YZY’s opening trades, again suggesting advance coordination.
Date | Opening Price | Peak Price | Current Price | 24h Change |
Launch Day | ~$0.01 | $0.90+ | $0.6921 | –23% |
Tate’s $16K Short Trade Highlights Crypto’s Spectacle Economy
Andrew Tate’s bet against YZY Coin – a 3x leveraged short from $0.8524 – earned him a $16,000 profit.
But the win doesn’t reflect a strong trading record: his broader stats on Hyperliquid show only 36% of trades are profitable, with total losses nearing $699K.
Tate’s name has been linked to other meme-fueled disasters, like $DADDY Coin, which fell from $124M to $17M in a year.
He also promoted $G, a short-lived token that flamed out quickly. These flashy endorsements often push prices up – but the eventual crash hits average investors hardest.
As the meme economy grows more unpredictable, even high-profile wins like Tate’s may be more about luck than skill.
Wall Street Pepe: A Solana-Based Meme Token With a Different Game Plan
With YZY Coin now trading sideways and trust in celebrity tokens eroding, attention is shifting to more community-centric launches – and Wall Street Pepe ($WEPE) is leading the charge.
This Solana-native token, spun off from its Ethereum predecessor, is making noise for a few key reasons:
Every $WEPE (SOL) purchase burns the equivalent amount on Ethereum – shrinking total supply on both chains
Liquidity is public and transparent, funded by the project treasury
No surprise tokenomics – all tokens are pegged 1:1 to $WEPE (ETH) and distributed through open minting
Over 1 billion tokens burned on ETH and nearly 2.7M more to be burned at SOL launch
Unlike celebrity-led tokens, Wall Street Pepe is embracing a degen-first narrative, pushing memes, burns, and multichain coordination without the vague celebrity tie-ins or hidden whales. Traders burned by YZY’s insider drama are now eyeing WEPE as a shot at redemption.
Meme coins aren’t going anywhere. But which ones are worth the risk? Wall Street Pepe is betting that fairness and transparency – not fame – is what traders want in 2025.