Why Most Meme Coins Fail (and Why Coins Like $PIPPIN Are Built to Bleed)
#BinanceSquareFamily #1PercentClub
Let’s be honest.
Most meme coins are not investments.
They are liquidity extraction mechanisms.
They launch on hype, trend for a moment, and then spend the rest of their existence doing one thing: distributing losses to late buyers.
Ask yourself:
• What happens to a meme coin after the hype is gone?
• Who is buying when volume dries up?
• Who is providing exit liquidity when price keeps making lower highs?
Exactly.
Coins like Pippin don’t need bad news to go down.
They only need silence.
No narrative = no buyers.
No buyers = gravity.
Market Reality
Meme coins almost always follow the same path:
• Parabolic pump
• Distribution
• Long bleed
• Random dead-cat bounces
• Then irrelevance
They don’t trend down smoothly.
They trap traders with violent relief pumps and fake reversals — especially on leverage.
So ask yourself:
• Are you trading structure, or are you married to a narrative?
• Would you still hold this coin if Twitter stopped talking about it tomorrow?
Hard Truths
• Hope is not a strategy
• Community is not support
• Memes don’t have fair value — only attention value
And attention is the most fragile asset in this market.
Respect your capital more than you respect your opinions.
If price is below key moving averages, making lower highs, and failing to reclaim structure — the market is already telling you the truth.
The question is:
• Are you listening?
• Or are you waiting to be proven “right”?
Because the market doesn’t reward conviction.


