PumpFun’s PUMP token has experienced a nearly 35% decline in value over the past month, significantly underperforming the broader crypto market.
The decline comes despite the platform’s ongoing buyback program. This has raised questions on the effectiveness of revenue-backed support mechanisms in the face of sustained whale selling and a wider market downturn.
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Buyback-Driven Demand Falls Short Amid Broader Sell-off
Pump.fun launched its buyback program for the native PUMP token in July 2025, shortly after the token’s debut. Under this mechanism, the platform allocates 100% of its revenue to purchasing PUMP. This creates consistent and substantial daily buy pressure.
Since inception, these buybacks have amounted to approximately $218.1 million in total purchases. The network has deployed $32.7 million in buybacks over the past 30 days alone.
In theory, token buybacks are typically considered bullish, as they reduce circulating supply and provide sustained demand support.
However, this aggressive, revenue-backed strategy has not been sufficient to offset the broader market downturn’s impact. Since early October, the crypto market has faced mounting headwinds.
The total cryptocurrency market capitalization has declined by nearly 30%, with major assets such as Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) experiencing substantial losses.
PUMP has not been immune to this trend. The token has dipped by approximately 35% over the past 30 days.
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“PumpFun is allocating 100% of its revenue to PUMP buybacks, amounting to nearly $1 million in daily buy pressure. Despite this, the token is down over 80% from its ATH and about 30% below its previous all time low (pre-buybacks). This clearly shows that buybacks, no matter how aggressive, have limited impact in a market downturn especially when the token’s utility is weak or constrained,” an analyst wrote.
The downtrend extended further today, with the altcoin falling an additional 6.9%. At press time, it was trading around $0.0017, a price last seen during the October market-wide sell-off.
PUMP’s challenges have been further exacerbated by recent whale activity. One notable whale recently deposited 3.8 billion PUMP, valued at approximately $7.57 million, into FalconX after holding the position for three months. This whale withdrew the tokens from Binance at $19.53 million, leading to an unrealized loss of $12.22 million.
Data from Nansen indicates that, over the past 30 days, balances of large investors, defined as wallets holding more than 1 million PUMP tokens, have declined by 13.07%. When large holders exit positions at substantial losses, it often reflects waning confidence in the token.
Overall, PUMP’s performance highlights the limits of even aggressive, revenue-backed buybacks during broader market downturns. As long as selling pressure from large holders persists and investor risk appetite continues to weaken, buybacks alone are unlikely to provide sustained price support.
