Pump.fun (PUMP) has spent $350 million buying back its own token since July 2025, yet the price sits 81% below its September all-time high and recently hit record lows.
The Solana-based meme coin launchpad now faces growing community backlash over what critics call a tokenomics structure designed for extraction rather than growth.
Why $350 Million in Buybacks Haven’t Moved the Needle
Pump.fun’s official dashboard confirms cumulative purchases of $350 million in PUMP, removing roughly 116 billion tokens from circulation.
That equals about 32.9% of the circulating supply. The protocol directs nearly all daily revenue toward repurchases, averaging around $1 million per day.
Despite this aggressive strategy, PUMP trades near $0.00165, well below its $0.004 ICO price and far from its $0.0088 peak.
Users argue that insiders hold roughly half the supply and sell into each buyback for exit liquidity.
“They own 50% of the $PUMP supply they could have easily sold into every buyback as exit liquidity… Probably one of the worst tokenomic structures in the industry,” wrote 0xSweep.
Supply Pressure and the July Cliff
Only 59% of the one trillion PUMP supply currently circulates. A major unlock scheduled for July 12, 2026, will make 41% of the locked supply tradable. Founders and early investors acquired tokens at negligible cost.
On-chain data from March showed a team-linked wallet transferring 1.75 billion PUMP to Bitget, reinforcing sell-off concerns.
Meanwhile, cumulative protocol revenue has surpassed $1 billion according to DefiLlama, yet none of it has translated into sustained token appreciation.
Whether the buyback program represents genuine value return or a liquidity exit ramp for insiders will depend on what happens when those locked tokens hit the open market this summer.
The post Pump.fun $350 Million PUMP Buybacks Fail To Lift Token Price appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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