The Trump memecoin ran one of the loudest retail crypto hype cycles of the past decade, and a year later the party is nearly empty. Trading volume tied to the upcoming Mar-a-Lago dinner collapsed 89% from last year's run-up.
The token itself is down 95% from its January 2025 peak. The price of admission to the VIP event has fallen even more steeply than the token has.
The hype cycle didn't fade. It cracked.
The Volume Collapse
Ahead of the 2025 Trump memecoin dinner, total $TRUMP trading volume hit $12.9 billion. Ahead of the 2026 dinner, volume is just $1.4 billion.
That's a drop of 89% in a single year, which is a collapse rather than a slowdown, and it's the cleanest measure of how much retail enthusiasm has evaporated from the token.
The dinner itself is structured as a perk for top token holders, who qualify for an invitation by holding large amounts of $TRUMP on a leaderboard that closes at a set time. Last year's entry threshold was roughly $55,000 in tokens.
This year's reported threshold is approximately $8,460. The bar to get in has fallen more than 80%.
When the required holding drops that dramatically, two things are happening. Fewer people are willing to commit capital at any level, and the fundraising mechanism has lost most of its pricing power.
Both are symptoms of a dead hype cycle.
The Insider Math
Trump, his family, and insiders tied to the token have netted an estimated $320 million from the launch and subsequent trading activity. That number is paid out of the same pool of retail buyers who are now deeply underwater on their token positions.
The price chart tells that story cleanly. The $TRUMP token is down 95% from its January 2025 peak, which wiped out the majority of retail investors who bought into the initial hype.
Whale wallets that accumulated early or dumped into strength made money. The retail tier of the cycle did not.
The pattern: Memecoins with concentrated insider holdings and broad retail distribution tend to end this way. The difference here is the scale of the political branding and the public nature of the cashouts.
The Political Heat
Senate Democrats have raised ethics questions around the dinner, the broader token structure, and the extent to which a sitting president profits from a speculative asset tied directly to his name and brand. One senior aide told Politico that the event is "horrible and awful," but that "people see it for what it is: a con." That kind of line is usually filed under political opposition quotes.
What makes this week different is that the market data now supports the characterization. Trading volume down 89%.
Price down 95%. Dinner entry threshold down 85%.
All three numbers tell the same story, and they don't need a partisan framing to be damning. The upcoming 2026 Mar-a-Lago dinner will be held at a Virginia golf club.
The venue is new. The pattern is not, and for crypto markets, the lesson is that political memecoins carry all the same risks as other memecoins - volatility, concentration, and eventual collapse - without the additional upside that comes from real product adoption or cash flow.
What To Watch
The next inflection point is whether the Trump memecoin stabilizes at current levels or continues lower. A 95% drawdown from peak often marks a floor for liquid tokens with active communities.
If the price keeps sliding, the remaining retail holders capitulate, and the token quietly exits public attention entirely. For crypto markets more broadly, watch whether the memecoin category as a whole loses momentum.
If $TRUMP was a leading indicator for political and celebrity memecoins, its collapse could mark the end of that segment's cycle. If newer launches still attract volume, the Trump token becomes a cautionary tale rather than a category-wide signal.
