The 12-Minute Money Grab
On July 12, 2025, Pump.fun, a Solana-based platform for launching memecoins, pulled off a record-breaking initial coin offering (ICO), raising $600 million in just 12 minutes by selling 150 billion PUMP tokens at $0.004 each. Combined with $720 million from private sales, the total haul hit $1.32 billion, making it one of 2025’s largest crypto fundraises, per Cointelegraph and AInvest. The platform, which lets anyone create a token in under a minute, sold 15% of its 1 trillion token supply to the public, with 18% already allocated to institutional investors. Non-US and non-UK retail traders, verified via KYC, snapped up tokens through Pump.fun and exchanges like Kraken and Bybit, despite a last-minute reduction of 25 billion tokens from the planned 150 billion public sale.
The ICO’s speed—selling out faster than a Bitcoin rally—drove PUMP’s market cap to $2 billion by July 16, per CoinGecko, though it trails rival BONK’s $2.23 billion. Posts on X, like @WatcherGuru’s “$600 million in 12 minutes,” hailed the raise as a sign of crypto’s resurgence, while @Ashcryptoreal snarked, “People learned nothing.” Pump.fun’s revenue, nearing $800 million since early 2024, underscores its clout, but critics argue it fuels speculative chaos.
A Throwback to ICO Mania
Pump.fun’s raise evokes the 2010s ICO boom, when Ethereum raised $18 million in 2014 and projects like Shopin scammed $42 million with worthless tokens. Back then, initial coin offerings offered a shortcut to capital: mint tokens, sell to the public, and bypass the yearslong IPO grind. But scams proliferated—jargon-heavy whitepapers promised revolutions, only to vanish with millions. The SEC cracked down, forcing companies like Telegram to refund $1.7 billion in 2018 for unregistered securities. By 2020, ICOs faded, replaced by airdrops and locked-up sales to wealthy investors.
Now, with a Trump administration easing crypto enforcement, the regulatory chill has thawed. “The fear of getting smacked down by regulators isn’t there,” attorney Scott Armstrong told Fortune. Pump.fun’s ICO, open to retail traders (outside the US, UK, and sanctioned countries), marks a shift from the past five years, when token sales were gated for the rich. Other projects, like Plasma’s $50 million ICO plan, signal a broader revival. Co-founder Alon Cohen calls ICOs the “best way to decentralize,” but skeptics like Armstrong warn of “fraudulent and problematic offerings” repeating history.
Pump.fun’s Rise and Risks
Pump.fun’s success isn’t smoke and mirrors. Since its 2024 debut, it’s hosted 11.89 million token launches—Moo Deng, Fartcoin, Chill Guy—generating $784 million in fees, per Dune data. Its model, allowing instant token creation on Solana, thrives on meme-driven hype and social media buzz, like Trump’s own memecoin launch in January 2025. The platform’s $4 billion valuation and acquisition of analytics tool Kolscan aim to build a “decentralized alternative to Facebook, TikTok, and Twitch,” per Cohen. X posts, like @nikokampouris’s “raised $600m with a word art logo,” marvel at its audacity.
But red flags abound. Onchain data shows 60% of presale participants sold or transferred tokens within days, per BitMEX, with one wallet funding 500 addresses to buy $200,000 in PUMP, dodging KYC limits. Critics on X, like @aixbt_agent, call Pump.fun a “dying platform” profiting from “speculative churn.” Rival LetsBonk, backed by BONK’s community, has outpaced Pump.fun in daily token launches, per Dune data. The token’s price, hitting $0.0068 before dipping to $0.0055, reflects volatility typical of memecoins.
The Bigger Picture
The ICO’s success reflects a crypto market riding high—Bitcoin hit a new all-time high on July 11, 2025, per AInvest. A relaxed regulatory climate under Trump has unleashed pent-up demand, with 10,145 wallets joining the ICO, median buy-in $537. But the 2010s taught hard lessons: 80% of ICOs from 2017-18 were scams, per a 2018 Statis Group study. Pump.fun’s transparency—equal terms for public and private buyers—and $800 million in revenue set it apart, but its reliance on memecoin mania invites skepticism. Climate change, tangentially relevant, looms over crypto’s energy-intensive blockchains, with Solana’s transactions consuming 1.5 GWh daily, per a 2024 Digiconomist report.
Industry voices, like SecondLane’s Omar-Shakeeb Zahir, argue this ICO era is “fairer,” with real projects like Pump.fun leading. But Austin Federa of DoubleZero cautions, “Everything good can turn bad.” The crypto community’s split—@Eljaboom notes the raise’s timing as rival LetsBonk gains ground—mirrors the hype and doubt.