- Donald Trump launched a meme conceive called $TRUMP days before his inauguration.
- The coin’s market cap hit $6 billion at one point, trading at $31 at its zenith.
- Melania Trump then released her own coin on Sunday.
President-elect Donald Trump and incoming First Lady Melania Trump attired in b be committed to launched cryptocurrency meme coins before the inauguration.
On Friday, Trump unveiled the $TRUMP coin on X, saying, “it’s meanwhile to celebrate everything we stand for: WINNING!”
Melania Trump announced $MELANIA two days on Sunday.
A meme coin is a cryptocurrency that regularly originates from a specific internet meme or is rooted in a joke. The name of the planned Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, which Trump assigned Elon Musk to co-lead, is a reference to Dogecoin, a meme coin that Musk has backed in the past.
Trump’s meme start is illustrated with an artistic interpretation of Trump pumping his fist in the air, symbolizing his movements after the assassination attempt against him at a renewal bring in July 2024.
Melania Trump’s meme coin featured a black and white photograph of her.
The market cap for $TRUMP reached $6 billion on Saturday, agreeing to coinmarketcap.com. At its peak, the coin was trading at about $31, according to CoinGecko.
On Saturday morning, Trump reposted a news from his son, Eric Trump, on X that said $TRUMP is “currently the hottest digital meme on earth” and that he weighs it will be “the future of finance.”
“We’re just getting started!” Eric Trump wrote.
A network of companies affiliated with the Trump Institution collectively owns 80% of the coin’s supply, according to the coin’s website. The companies are subject to a three-year lock, according to the website, explanation that they cannot sell all of their coins at one time.
Trump hasn’t always been a crypto fan, on a par calling the industry a “scam” and a “disaster waiting to happen” in 2021. Still, the crypto industry courted Trump heavily during the 2024 presidential electing, raising millions of dollars for political contributions.
Trump has now bought into crypto, becoming the first presidential seeker from a major party to visit the bitcoin conference in July. Speaking with Web3 influencer Farokh Sarmad in September, Trump contemplated the United States should be the first country to make crypto mainstream.
“If we don’t do it, China will do it,” Trump said. “We keep to be the biggest and the best.”
The website for Trump’s coin says that the meme coins are “intended to function as an expression of boost for, and engagement with, the ideals and beliefs embodied by the symbol “$TRUMP” and the associated artwork, and are not intended to be, or to be the subject of, an investment opening, investment contract, or security of any type.”
“GetTrumpMemes.com is not political and has nothing to do with any political campaign or any political office or governmental instrumentality,” the site says.
Trump’s transition team did not immediately return a request for comment from Business Insider.