Can Pump.fun Crack the Creator Token Conundrum by 2026?

比推Pubblicato 2025-12-17Pubblicato ultima volta 2025-12-17

Introduzione

Based on Delphi's upcoming 2026 applications report, this analysis examines Pump.fun, a leading meme coin launchpad, and its challenges in realizing its vision for creator tokens. While Pump.fun dominates the launchpad space, its core challenge remains unresolved: creating a sustainable economic model for creator tokens. Most creator tokens fail to retain value, as the token itself becomes part of the product with unclear utility for holders. The notable exception was the viral @onlybagwork phenomenon, which demonstrated the potential of the model by generating over 2300 SOL in fees for its creators without them selling their holdings. However, such success has proven fleeting, and no subsequent creator token has achieved similar organic momentum or valuation. The platform's shift to using 100% of net revenue for $PUMP token buybacks has fueled a significant price increase, giving it a lower market-cap-to-revenue ratio than major competitors like Hyperliquid. Despite a sharp decline in daily launchpad revenue from its peak, Pump.fun maintains a structural advantage and dominant market share. Looking ahead to 2026, key questions remain: Can Pump.fun design a sustainable incentive structure for creator tokens? How will it manage upcoming token unlocks? The report suggests the team may need to focus its strategy, which currently spans streaming, Initial Community Offerings (ICM), and mobile. Potential strategic directions include expanding into iGaming—a natural fit for its u...

Author: Simon

Compiled by: Deep Tide TechFlow

Original title: Can Pump.fun Tell a New Story Next Year?


The following content is excerpted from Delphi's upcoming "2026 Application Outlook Report," focusing on Pump(.)fun — one of the consumer applications we are most interested in for the coming year.

Since we published the initial Pump report (before its funding round), many things have changed. Many of the dynamics we predicted have been validated, but some areas have fallen short of expectations, leaving users and investors disappointed. However, the core challenges facing Pump remain unchanged.

To realize Pump's grand vision, the team needs to strike a balance between the short-term profit-seeking nature of the crypto industry and its long-term vision for the platform. It is worth noting that once a project launches a token, its operational environment shifts; the token itself becomes an independent product with inherent reflexivity, continuously shaping user expectations. Pump is no exception.

Since completing its funding round, the Pump team has increased its investment in crypto-native streaming, but this area has not developed as smoothly as we anticipated, at least not yet reaching the ideal state.

Pump has not yet succeeded in attracting core creators from outside the crypto ecosystem, and the CCM meta (creator coin meta) that emerged on the Pump platform was short-lived. The most notable moment came from the "Bagwork" campaign, which not only demonstrated the potential of creator-driven tokens but also revealed the structural issues hindering the model's development.

This viral explosion was led by a group of teenagers who, with some support from Pump, executed a series of sensational events: snatching Bradley Martyn's hat, storming the Dodgers' game field, rushing onto the Knicks' court, and even getting tattoos of Pumpfun and Bagwork.

The rise of @onlybagwork almost perfectly coincided with the peak of Pump.fun's frenzy in mid-September. At that time, the fully diluted valuation (FDV) of $PUMP reached approximately $8.5 billion, and Bagwork's market cap briefly exceeded $50 million.

However, since then, no creator token has come close to such organic momentum or reached similar valuation peaks.

The Knicks court incident occurred more recently, long after the initial hype, and now Bagwork's market cap is just over $2 million.

Bagwork is one of the few cases in Pump's streaming experiment that actually worked as intended. The Bagwork team earned over 2300 SOL in creator revenue from $BAGWORK trading fees (approximately $300,000 at current prices).

Notably, all of this was achieved without the team selling their holdings. Viral events directly translated into attention, trading volume, and fee revenue, creating the closest case to a true creator token flywheel effect for Pump to date.

However, beyond Bagwork, Pump has struggled to realize its streaming vision. Creator tokens have consistently failed to retain their value. This phenomenon can be traced back to a fundamental issue: the token itself is part of the product.

Currently, the economic rationale for owning or supporting a streamer's token remains unclear. Bagwork's early success quickly faded, and since then, every major streamer token has failed to gain similar traction, eventually trending toward zero.

Creators can achieve short-term gains through the CCM fee structure, but the reputational risk associated with crashed tokens makes this model unattractive to larger, more established creators who could have helped the platform reach a broader audience. From a trader's perspective, these tokens remain a zero-sum game environment rather than genuine communities.

This is the most critical issue Pump needs to address as it moves into 2026.

So far, the team has not made meaningful attempts at deeper creator incentive mechanisms, and airdrop allocations remain untouched. Apart from the informal support provided during the Bagwork frenzy, Pump has not taken any coordinated measures, such as targeted airdrops, creator rewards, or other incentive mechanisms that could have been used to kickstart early momentum, create more PvE (Player vs. Environment)-style incentives, and provide creators with a space to experiment without immediately damaging their communities.

The good news is that this provides Pump with significant flexibility.

The untouched "Community & Ecosystem Initiatives" treasury remains a powerful lever the team can utilize as the model matures. If Pump can design a sustainable incentive structure for creator tokens, it could open up a new economic category for creators looking to leverage crypto mechanisms for monetization and audience expansion.

Although this potential upside is substantial, until then, streaming will continue to manifest as a series of short-lived hype cycles rather than a durable and repeatable vertical.

On the token side, the primary catalyst that drove $PUMP from around $0.025 to $0.085 was the team's decision to use 100% of net revenue for buybacks.

Pump shifted from initially planning to use about a quarter of its revenue for buybacks to almost fully adopting a Hyperliquid-style buyback model. This change was made after the market clearly indicated that a partial buyback model would not be well-received. This shift ignited one of the strongest large-cap token rallies this year in a liquidity-scarce and challenging altcoin market.

In terms of the buyback-to-market-cap ratio, no other major token currently trades at a lower multiple.

Based on current data, Pump's annualized revenue is $422 million, with a market cap of $1.84 billion, implying a market-cap-to-revenue ratio (MC/Rev) of 4.36x and an annualized buyback yield of approximately 12.8%. This is significantly lower than other large-cap tokens, including Hyperliquid's ~8.01x MC/Rev and ~3.34% yield.

Even so, the market remains skeptical about Pump's long-term business prospects.

Market concerns may include: whether the team can consistently deliver meaningful products; the impact of future unlocks on the market with approximately 40% of the token supply still locked; and the uncertainty surrounding the final allocation of airdrop and creator incentive distributions. Additionally, the overall contraction of Meme coin activity in the crypto market, reduced end-user activity, and questions about the sustainability of Pump's revenue base also raise doubts.

Despite these concerns, Pump still dominates the Meme coin launchpad space. Even in the current extremely tough market environment, Pump still earns (and buys back) about $1 million daily.

Pump's daily launchpad revenue has dropped nearly 85% from its peak of close to $14 million earlier this year to currently around $2 million. However, competitors have only posed a threat to Pump's position for brief periods, failing to bring substantial challenges. This aligns with our prediction in the initial report regarding the short-lived Bonk and Raydium challenge phases: even during cyclical trading volume contractions, Pump has maintained structural advantages and dominated the industry's activity share.

The acquisition of Padre supports the view that Pump intends to expand beyond Solana into a multi-chain ecosystem and has achieved support for BNB ecosystem assets through the Padre frontend. This also aligns with our earlier prediction that Pump would eventually acquire a terminal or terminal-related asset to strengthen user acquisition channels and integrate more of the user journey.

Beyond these moves, the team has recently maintained a low-profile strategy. An investor call is currently planned but had not been held at the time of writing, so more details may be disclosed later.

The leadership team has also expressed interest in the broader ICM (Initial Community Offering) category, although we believe this is not the core area of Pump's current brand positioning or product strengths. Pump initially experimented with the Believe model but failed to gain significant market attention. MetaDAO has become the dominant player in the "high-quality founder + community" fundraising space.

Furthermore, the culture and structure of ICM seem less aligned with Pump's brand positioning. Pump's brand core revolves around speculation, speed, and the Meme culture of creators, rather than long-term governance or Futarchy-based systems. For Pump to succeed in the ICM space, they would need to lean towards more governance-focused structures and attract non-crypto teams looking to operate on-chain. However, this does not fully align with the needs and positioning of Pump's current users and creators. Although theoretically, ICM could offer some potential upside if the team takes action, we see this more as a secondary or optional direction rather than a natural extension of Pump's existing flywheel into 2026.

Looking ahead to 2026, Pump's main questions focus on: whether it can finally establish an incentive-compatible creator token model; whether it can achieve substantial multi-chain market expansion through Padre; how to manage the risks of token unlocks and declining revenue visibility; and which product vertical to prioritize as its main focus. Currently, Pump's strategy seems scattered across multiple directions, including streaming, ICM, and mobile.

At some point in the future, the team may need to clearly focus on one core breakthrough. For most of 2025, that breakthrough seemed to be streaming, but this is no longer clear now.

The bigger question is whether Pump can attract larger non-crypto creators. This might require redesigning the creator token flywheel mechanism, providing stronger, longer-term incentives to support viral growth beyond the crypto-native user base. Pump has the basic conditions to achieve this. The 2025 Bagwork frenzy briefly showcased the potential success of this model, a time when Pump seemed close to crossing the chasm.

Furthermore, Pump still has vast room to expand its product suite. One strategic direction the team should seriously evaluate is entering the iGaming or casino-related vertical. Adopting a model similar to Kick or Stake would naturally fit Pump's speculation-driven user base. This direction would deeply synergize with its Meme coin and streaming strategic goals, and the profit potential in this field is already proven.

Shuffle's net gaming revenue and weekly lottery distribution demonstrate the huge potential of this area with successful execution.

Pump's mobile application is another underutilized advantage. Deeper expansion into mobile could broaden user acquisition channels, make the product more accessible to mainstream users, and provide creators with more monetization scenarios. If combined with iGaming, this could not only significantly expand Pump's potential audience but also strengthen the platform's existing successful elements.

Despite the uncertainties, Pump remains one of the most resilient consumer applications of this cycle, maintaining dominance even as the overall market landscape has shifted. Substantial progress in any key direction could trigger a significant shift in market sentiment and help Pump break through to attract a broader non-crypto-native user base.


Twitter:https://twitter.com/BitpushNewsCN

BitPush TG Group:https://t.me/BitPushCommunity

BitPush TG Channel: https://t.me/bitpush

Original link:https://www.bitpush.news/articles/7596421

Crypto di tendenza

Domande pertinenti

QWhat is the core challenge that Pump.fun still faces in 2026 according to the article?

AThe core challenge is creating a sustainable and incentive-compatible creator token model. The fundamental problem is that the token itself is part of the product, and the economic rationale for holding or supporting a streamer's token remains unclear, causing most tokens to trend toward zero and making the model unattractive to larger, established creators.

QWhat was the Bagwork phenomenon, and why was it significant for Pump.fun?

ABagwork was a viral event led by a group of teenagers who engaged in attention-grabbing stunts, which coincided with the peak of Pump.fun's activity in mid-September. It was significant because it was one of the few cases where Pump.fun's streaming experiment worked as intended, generating over 2300 SOL in creator fees and briefly showcasing the potential flywheel effect of a true creator token without the team selling their holdings.

QHow does Pump.fun's current market cap to revenue (MC/Rev) ratio compare to other major tokens like Hyperliquid?

APump.fun's MC/Rev ratio is 4.36x with an annualized buyback yield of ~12.8%, which is significantly lower than other major tokens. For comparison, Hyperliquid has an MC/Rev ratio of ~8.01x and a yield of ~3.34%.

QWhat strategic direction does the article suggest could be a natural fit for Pump.fun's user base and existing strategy?

AThe article suggests that entering the iGaming or casino-related verticals would be a natural strategic fit. This approach, similar to models like Kick or Stake, aligns with Pump.fun's speculation-driven user base and could create deep synergies with its meme coin and streaming goals, leveraging proven monetization potential.

QDespite a significant drop in daily launchpad revenue, what advantage does Pump.fun maintain in the meme coin platform space?

APump.fun maintains a dominant structural advantage and continues to command the majority share of industry activity, even during cyclical trading volume contractions. It still earns and buys back approximately $1 million daily, and competitors have only posed a threat briefly without providing a substantial challenge.

Letture associate

Two Legends Lost in Three Days: Is Google's AI Talent Dam Cracking?

In three days, Google lost two AI legends. On June 18, Noam Shazeer, co-author of the seminal "Attention is All You Need" paper and Gemini co-lead, left for OpenAI. Just 48 hours later, John Jumper, 2024 Nobel laureate and AlphaFold lead, departed DeepMind for Anthropic. This follows Andrej Karpathy joining Anthropic in May. These moves highlight a structural trend: top AI talent is concentrating at mission-driven, pre-IPO firms like OpenAI and Anthropic, while Google becomes a primary source. The exodus stems from a core mission mismatch. Google's ad-centric model often subordinates AI research to product and revenue goals, creating friction for pioneers like Shazeer, who returned in 2024 only to leave again. In contrast, OpenAI and Anthropic offer singular focus on pushing AI boundaries, whether towards AGI or safety-aligned models, which deeply appeals to top researchers like Jumper. Financial incentives amplify the pull. With both OpenAI and Anthropic nearing IPO, employees stand to gain immensely from equity, an upside Google's mature stock cannot match. Furthermore, the 2023 merger of Google Brain and DeepMind, intended to consolidate strength, has instead created cultural tension and slowed the path from research to product, as evidenced by Gemini's pace. This talent redistribution is reshaping the AI landscape. While Google retains vast data and compute resources, its true crisis is the quiet, continuous loss of the people who define the field's future. The real moat in AI is not infrastructure, but the concentration of brilliant minds—a battle Google is currently losing.

marsbit50 min fa

Two Legends Lost in Three Days: Is Google's AI Talent Dam Cracking?

marsbit50 min fa

Behind the AI Report Card, Lies a Chinese 'Exam Setter'

Beyond the familiar performance charts like MMLU-Pro and MMMU, which major AI models strive to ace, stands a key "examiner": Chinese-Canadian researcher Wenhu Chen. An assistant professor at the University of Waterloo and founder of TIGERLab, Chen addresses the crucial need for more rigorous AI evaluation. As models like GPT-4 began scoring near-perfect results on older benchmarks like MMLU, it became difficult to distinguish their true capabilities. In response, Chen introduced MMLU-Pro in 2024, featuring harder, more reasoning-focused questions with more answer choices, successfully reintroducing meaningful performance gaps. His work extends to multi-modal evaluation with MMMU and its enhanced version, MMMU-Pro. These benchmarks test a model's ability to understand and reason with complex information from images, charts, and text across diverse academic subjects, exposing the significant challenges even top models face in genuine comprehension. Chen's background in complex QA, table reasoning, and his experience at Google DeepMind on projects like Gemini inform his approach. He understands that effective benchmarks must anticipate how models might "cheat" by memorizing data or avoiding visual analysis. His lab also actively researches video understanding and generation models (e.g., UniVideo, Vamba), ensuring his evaluation work is grounded in practical model-building challenges. Now at Meta's Super Intelligence Lab, Chen continues his focus on multi-modal data and evaluation, representing the deep yet often unseen contributions of Chinese talent in shaping the fundamental tools of the AI industry.

marsbit1 h fa

Behind the AI Report Card, Lies a Chinese 'Exam Setter'

marsbit1 h fa

Alliance Co-founder's Letter to Entrepreneurs: Written at the Moment Cursor Sold for $600 Billion

Alliance Co-founder's Letter to Entrepreneurs: On Cursor's $60 Billion Sale Many aspiring founders see massive exits like Cursor's $60B sale and wonder why they can't achieve the same, often concluding opportunities are exhausted. But great companies aren't built in obvious, crowded spaces. Cursor, like Stripe, Figma, and Shopify before it, started with a non-consensus belief about the future. Before ChatGPT, they believed AI would transform knowledge work. They focused on a genuinely exciting domain, became their own customer, and obsessed over power users. Their journey involved years of "glass-chewing" effort before the market was ready. The pattern is consistent: identify a long-term technological shift, find a missed entry point, and execute for years before the trend becomes obvious. First-generation products (PayPal, Adobe, Amazon) prove a market exists. Second-generation winners (Stripe, Figma, Shopify) rebuild that market around new insights, technology, or changing customer behaviors. Founders must identify their phase in the cycle. Early entrants like Coinbase or Cursor focus on making new technology usable for power users. Later entrants find the "yin" to the established "yang"—the blind spots incumbents miss as they grow distant from individual users. The key is deep market immersion. Use every product in your space. Talk to users. Build an audience. Stop looking for ideas and start *seeing* them everywhere. Then, choose one. The idea must offer a 10x improvement or solve a "hair-on-fire" pain point—something severe enough that users are already crafting workarounds. When building, avoid feature bloat. Ask: why would someone switch? Great startups rarely force new behaviors; they improve familiar workflows with drastically lower friction (e.g., Cursor forked VS Code instead of creating a new editor). Distribution is the underestimated moat. Before product-market fit, achieve distribution-market fit. How do customers discover new tools? Founders like those at Airbnb, Stripe, and Cursor did unscalable, manual work to recruit early users. The final, unteachable ingredient is resilience. Cursor built for years pre-market, faced rejection, and persisted. So did Airbnb, Nvidia, and Rain (which launched post-FTX collapse). The lesson isn't that these founders were smarter, but that they stayed in the game long enough for their insights to compound. Framework: Spot technological cycles. Cultivate unique insight. Obsess over your market. Talk to customers. Find a hair-on-fire problem. Build the simplest wedge. Win your distribution channel. Above all, don't quit when it gets hard. Most people won't do these things consistently. The few who do build the next generation of great companies. Go build.

marsbit1 h fa

Alliance Co-founder's Letter to Entrepreneurs: Written at the Moment Cursor Sold for $600 Billion

marsbit1 h fa

Weekly Editor's Picks (0613-0619)

Weekly Editor's Picks (0613-0619): Market Insights & Analysis This weekly digest curates in-depth analysis often lost in the information flow, focusing on key insights across macro trends, investment, and technology. **Macro & Geopolitics:** With the Strait of Hormuz reopening and military conflict shifting to negotiation, markets are pivoting from "war shock" to "supply restoration." Trades include shorting crude risk premiums, longing airlines/tourism, Asian energy importers, and bond duration, while shorting inflation expectations. LNG, fertilizer, and chemical chains are also being repriced. **Investment & VC:** Ray Dalio advises against betting on concentrated AI giants dominating indices, advocating for diversified portfolios of high-quality, low-correlation assets instead. Analysis covers the 4-year crypto cycle, predicting the core surviving product by 2029 will be asset trading markets. Current BTC metrics suggest a potential bottoming zone, presenting a patient accumulation window. SpaceX's high-profile IPO at a $2.1T valuation faces scrutiny over fundamentals, with key watchpoints being its likely inclusion in the Nasdaq index and Q2 earnings. Concerns are raised about potential "gamma squeeze" and systemic risks if its narrative-driven valuation gets amplified by passive index funds. Robinhood (HOOD) is noted for breaking its high correlation with crypto, bolstered by its stock trading and new underwriting business. **Web3 & AI:** A warning highlights ~$1.8T in off-balance-sheet AI infrastructure commitments (purchase commitments, leases) as a potential systemic risk if AI monetization lags. AI models are being used for World Cup predictions, adding a new layer for betting markets. A cost breakdown of a $20 AI subscription reveals the supply chain from model companies to cloud, GPUs, and power. **Prediction Markets:** The emergence of prediction market "concept stocks" is noted, with Robinhood developing its own platform, Rothera, signaling a shift from market competition to a "channel war" for user access. **CeFi & DeFi:** The SpaceX IPO tested perpetual contract mechanisms for pre-IPO assets, highlighting challenges in handling corporate actions like stock splits on-chain. The de-pegging of STRC (Strategy's preferred share) to ~$89 reflects market concerns over MicroStrategy's capital structure and BTC-backed leverage model. BlackRock's covered-call Bitcoin ETF (BITA) offers yield but caps upside, appealing to yield-seeking institutions. **Ethereum:** An opinion piece argues Ethereum's core strength is its vast developer community and composability, solidifying its role as the default operating system for the financial internet. **Weekly Hot Topics:** Include the US-Iran deal reopening the Strait of Hormuz, Fed's hawkish hold, Anthropic restricting model access, SpaceX acquiring Cursor, and a humorous stock surge for "Liuliumei" due to its "LLM" ticker.

marsbit1 h fa

Weekly Editor's Picks (0613-0619)

marsbit1 h fa

Alliance's Co-Founder's Letter to Entrepreneurs: Written on the Occasion of Cursor's $60 Billion Sale

In this letter to entrepreneurs, Alliance reflects on the success of Cursor's $60 billion sale to Elon Musk, using it as a case study to counter the misconception that opportunities in crowded fields like AI or crypto are exhausted. The piece argues that great companies like Cursor, Stripe, Figma, and Shopify are not built by geniuses with perfect ideas, but by founders who start with a non-consensus belief about the future and build for years before that future becomes obvious to everyone. They identify long-term shifts, find overlooked entry points, and execute relentlessly. The framework for success involves: 1. **Identifying your place in the technology cycle**: Early-stage opportunities focus on making new tech usable for power users (e.g., Coinbase, Cursor). Later-stage opportunities involve finding the "yin" to an existing "yang"—the blind spots of first-generation players (e.g., Stripe vs. PayPal, Figma vs. Adobe). 2. **Cultivating unique insights**: Immerse yourself deeply in the market. Use every product, talk to users, and build an audience. Insights will emerge naturally from deep engagement. 3. **Finding a "hair-on-fire" problem**: Look for a 10x improvement or a severe, urgent pain point. The strongest signal is people already building clumsy workarounds. 4. **Building a focused MVP**: Don't just add features because you can. Ask why users would abandon their current tool for yours. The best startups rarely force new behaviors; they improve familiar workflows with drastically lower friction. 5. **Winning a distribution channel**: Distribution is often the moat. Before product-market fit, achieve channel-market fit. Find where your customers are and build an engine to reach them, even through unscalable, manual efforts initially. 6. **Persistence**: The final, unteachable ingredient is resilience. Success stories like Cursor, Airbnb, and Nvidia involved years of grinding, rejection, and perseverance when the path forward seemed unclear. The conclusion is that there is no secret. Most people fail to consistently execute these steps over the long term. The few who do build the companies that define the next era. The world is yours to create.

链捕手1 h fa

Alliance's Co-Founder's Letter to Entrepreneurs: Written on the Occasion of Cursor's $60 Billion Sale

链捕手1 h fa

Trading

Spot
Futures

Articoli Popolari

Come comprare PUMP

Benvenuto in HTX.com! Abbiamo reso l'acquisto di Pump.fun (PUMP) semplice e conveniente. Segui la nostra guida passo passo per intraprendere il tuo viaggio nel mondo delle criptovalute.Step 1: Crea il tuo Account HTXUsa la tua email o numero di telefono per registrarti il tuo account gratuito su HTX. Vivi un'esperienza facile e sblocca tutte le funzionalità,Crea il mio accountStep 2: Vai in Acquista crypto e seleziona il tuo metodo di pagamentoCarta di credito/debito: utilizza la tua Visa o Mastercard per acquistare immediatamente Pump.funPUMP.Bilancio: Usa i fondi dal bilancio del tuo account HTX per fare trading senza problemi.Terze parti: abbiamo aggiunto metodi di pagamento molto utilizzati come Google Pay e Apple Pay per maggiore comodità.P2P: Fai trading direttamente con altri utenti HTX.Over-the-Counter (OTC): Offriamo servizi su misura e tassi di cambio competitivi per i trader.Step 3: Conserva Pump.fun (PUMP)Dopo aver acquistato Pump.fun (PUMP), conserva nel tuo account HTX. In alternativa, puoi inviare tramite trasferimento blockchain o scambiare per altre criptovalute.Step 4: Scambia Pump.fun (PUMP)Scambia facilmente Pump.fun (PUMP) nel mercato spot di HTX. Accedi al tuo account, seleziona la tua coppia di trading, esegui le tue operazioni e monitora in tempo reale. Offriamo un'esperienza user-friendly sia per chi ha appena iniziato che per i trader più esperti.

323 Totale visualizzazioniPubblicato il 2024.12.12Aggiornato il 2026.06.02

Come comprare PUMP

Discussioni

Benvenuto nella Community HTX. Qui puoi rimanere informato sugli ultimi sviluppi della piattaforma e accedere ad approfondimenti esperti sul mercato. Le opinioni degli utenti sul prezzo di PUMP PUMP sono presentate come di seguito.

活动图片