Love them or hate them, memecoins are winning either way

Plus, gauging Yano’s sentiment with the election a few weeks away

article-image

Jiri Hera/Shutterstock modified by Blockworks

share


Today, enjoy the Empire newsletter on Blockworks.co. Tomorrow, get the news delivered directly to your inbox. Subscribe to the Empire newsletter.


Fri-yay!

It’s been a generally quiet week for crypto across the board, so we’re taking a look at a few different areas. David, for example, celebrated the end of the week with memecoins. 

Oh, also, Yano gave some insight into what he’s watching — and one thing that could be either bullish or slightly concerning. 

We’ll see you on Monday.

— Katherine Ross

Three commas for every coin

Say what you will about memecoins — they’ve clearly found product-market fit.

Back when the /r/wallstreetbets saga kicked off the first memecoin mania in 2021, it was mostly dog coins that were super hot: Dogecoin copy-cats like shiba inu, babydoge and floki, the latter of which was named after Elon Musk’s dog, a shiba inu.

At the time, hardly any memecoins were at the top end of the market. There were, as always, silly projects with outrageous valuations that weren’t explicitly memecoins — such as SafeMoon and Hex

But out of the top 250 or so, pure-play memecoins were represented by that small handful of dog coins orbiting Musk’s then-newly found appreciation for Dogecoin.

Today, over 10% of the top-250 are memecoins, and they’re securing more billion-dollar market caps faster than ever.

Out of the memecoins that have launched during this cycle (which, let’s say, started in 2022), seven have reached the $1 billion mark at some point : BONK, BOME, WIF, BRETT, POPCAT, CORGIAI and PEPE.

This chart plots market caps of dozens of memecoins, as if they were all launched at once

On average, it took those seven memecoins about five months to reach three commas. BOME did it in four days, PEPE in 21 and WIF in 84. 

A slew of smaller memecoins have also either recently hit all-time highs or are approaching new records as we speak, including MOG, TURBO, SPX6900, NEIRO, GIGACHAD and NPC.

One theory goes that memecoins are capturing so much interest simply because the SEC has sued the market into submission: 

If a majority of the crypto market is considered investment contracts (regulated in the same way as securities), then why not trade the most pointless tokens instead?

Let’s say that’s true. Thanks a lot Gensler, you’ve made crypto more fun than ever!

— David Canellis

IYKYK

We caught up with Empire podcast host (and Blockworks co-founder!) Jason Yanowitz again this week to gauge his sentiment with the election just a few weeks away. 

I’ll preface this now: There’s good, and then there are some potentially uncomfortable things headed our way. But I’ll leave you to pick and choose what you take away from our conversation.

“I think, even [at the] end of Q4, I genuinely think there’s a chance that bitcoin breaks all-time highs in November or December. You have, on a macro level … The dollar’s kind of turning over … Interest rates are going down,” Yanowitz explained to me. 

He added that he doesn’t agree with people who think that a single presidential candidate is good or bad for the industry. 

“Either way, Kamala [Harris] or [Donald] Trump … would be good for crypto. We just need a new administration, Democratic or Republican.”

He’s also wary of the amount of tokens coming down the pipeline. 

“Everyone’s trying to launch a token after the election and before Q1 ends. If they’re low-float, high-FDV tokens, that’s a bad thing and a lot of people are going to lose a lot of money,” Yano said. But, on the flip side, if they launch at “reasonable valuations,” then that could be bullish. It all depends on the structure, which we don’t know currently.

And now you know. 

Earlier this week, Galaxy released its quarterly update on venture capital activity in crypto. 

Some of the key takeaways: VCs invested $2.4 billion last quarter, a 20% decrease quarter-over-quarter. 2024 is now set up to just barely exceed 2023. 

Source: Galaxy

If you’ve been a loyal Empire reader, that last stat might not be too shocking, given our numerous conversations with PitchBook’s Robert Le about funding activity. 

Le’s been pretty vocal about when we could see activity pick up (spoiler alert — it’s not this year).

But the stat I wanted to hone in on is that last quarter actually saw a huge slice of the VC pie head to early-stage crypto projects. 85%, to be precise, leaving only 15% invested in later-stage companies. 

While VCs are still piling in, it looks like it’ll be some time before we see those types of projects hit the broader market.

The good news, for us at least, is that it’s possible to track dealflow and keep an eye on how VC activity is impacting crypto. Kind of fun, right?

— Katherine Ross


Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:

Tags

Decoding crypto and the markets. Daily, with Byron Gilliam.

Upcoming Events

Javits Center North | 445 11th Ave

Tues - Thurs, March 24 - 26, 2026

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

recent research

Flying_Tulip.png

Research

Flying Tulip's perpetual put option provides real principal protection, but investors must pay a valuation premium today for products that have to be built over the next 24 months. This structure works best as a stablecoin substitute where the put allows continuous monitoring—accept opportunity cost in exchange for asymmetric upside if the team executes on its ambitious cross-collateral architecture.

article-image

As flows consolidate and volatility fades, finding edge now means knowing which games are still worth playing

article-image

Value distribution came to $1.9 billion distributed in Q3, though total revenues have yet to beat 2021 heights

article-image

MegaETH public sale auction ends tomorrow, and the free money machine has attracted people who like free money

article-image

With tBTC under the hood, Acre abstracts bridging and converts non-BTC rewards to bitcoin

article-image

Accountable is also eyeing mid-November for mainnet launch

article-image

“Adjusted for size, I think it may be the most successful ETP launch of all time,” Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan says