Insider Trading Storm Erupts as Elite Wallet Group Dumps $24M of Kanye’s YZY Token
Whale wallets strike again—this time targeting Ye's controversial crypto venture. A tight-knit group of early holders just liquidated $24 million worth of YZY tokens in coordinated moves that reek of privileged information.
Patterns of Profit
Blockchain analytics reveal these weren't random sells. The transactions clustered in precise windows—right before negative news hit public channels. On-chain sleuths tracked the wallets back to pre-launch allocations, suggesting insiders capitalized on their head start.
Regulatory Gray Zone
Cryptocurrency's wild west reputation gets another black eye. Unlike traditional markets, crypto lacks clear insider trading frameworks—creating perfect conditions for early adopters to dump on retail. One cynic noted it's just 'VCs doing what VCs do: privatizing gains and socializing losses.'
Market Fallout
YZY token prices cratered 40% following the mass sell-off. Retail holders got left holding the bag—again—while the anonymous wallets disappeared into offshore exchanges. The episode exposes crypto's enduring irony: a decentralization ethos that consistently centralizes wealth among the connected few.
YZY token profits concentrated among a few wallets
Nansen data showed that 13 wallets each netted over $1 million by dumping YZY tokens into the market, collectively booking $24.5 million in realized profits. Many of these addresses had access to the contract address before the public launch, which could have given the owners an insider advantage.
Out of the first 99 wallets that purchased YZY, only nine still held the token as of Friday, according to blockchain queries. More than 56,000 wallets interacted with YZY at some point, with about 27,000 still holding at least $1 worth of the coin.
A Dune Analytics two-way investments pie chart showed that losses outweighed gains for most traders. The chart indicated that nearly two-thirds of addresses, or 64.1%, ended up with small losses between $0 and $500.
Another 27.4% of wallets were in modest profit within the same $0 to $500 range. About 5.3% of traders lost between $1,000 and $5,000, while another 2% recorded losses as from $500 to $1,000.
Blockchain sleuths have traced individual transactions that counted profits, including one wallet identified as 6MNWV8, which spent 450,611 USDC to acquire 1.29 million YZY tokens at $0.35. Minutes later, it sold 1.04 million tokens for $1.39 million, leaving $249,907 worth of YZY on hand. The trade secured a profit exceeding $1.5 million.
Another trader, identified as 2DNb2C, mistakenly purchased the wrong YZY token in a separate contract the day before the launch, losing $710,000. The same wallet later spent 761,000 USDC on the actual YZY, flipping it for a profit greater than the initial loss.
While insiders cashed in, some retail traders like one labeled 6ZFnRH spent 1.55 million USDC to buy 996,453 tokens at $1.56. Within two hours, it sold the stash for 1.05 million USDC, realizing a $500,000 loss.
Another trader, 0x68c0, opened long positions on YZY three times, collectively losing more than $200,000.
The largest loss tracked by Nansen was $1.8 million from a single wallet, while another wallet lost $1.2 million. A separate address continued holding YZY with unrealized losses of more than $800,000.
Market researcher Dexter Lab said that the YZY launch was a textbook “pump-and-dump.” In a thread posted on X on Thursday, the account claimed insiders controlled nearly all of the supply on the first day.
According to its analysis, insiders owned 94% of the tokens, with one multisignature wallet controlling 87%. The six largest wallets collectively held over 70% of the supply. Liquidity pools were also made for insiders to offload their holdings directly into retail liquidity.
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