Over the past few weeks, the Pudgy Penguins (Pengu) team has moved about 2.1 billion pen tokens (worth around $66.6 million) into centralized exchanges. Just today, on July 28th, 206.9 million transfers (approximately $8.9 million) took place.
Analysts warn that this massive token movement by team insiders indicates potential liquidation and price dumps, but Penn has been driven by ETF-related hype for the past month, and has skyrocketed by around 240%.
Rising phishing scams targeting the Pengu community
But even more troublesome is that, alongside the price movement, scammers have bolstered their phishing and crushing tricks. To be more precise, a small amount of pen is sent to a random wallet with a vanity name that leads to a fake domain that mimics the project. This will result in unsuspecting users sign wallet connections and malicious transactions.
Yesterday, Beau (Pudgy Penguins security officer) confirmed that there are no official Penguin Airdrops or billing available now.
Near the end of last year, fake sites disguised as official Pudgy Penguins pages have also been flagged and often distributed via harmful ads.
Despite being supported by Pudgy Penguins IP and the growing NFT community, Penguins is still a rather speculative memo coin. Large token movements, particularly those by key owners without transparent communication, can raise concerns about possible market manipulation and unorganized profits.
Hype-driven rally
Much of the recent Penn boost came from social media hype, not quite. In other words, Coinbase has changed its X profile photo to a stocky Penguin NFT.
Then, for the time being, the SEC has processed new filings. In particular, we have significantly processed the 19B-4 application from the CBOE seeking approval to trade Canary Pen ETFs. Canary Capital first applied to the ETF in March.
Due to the hype, some analysts remain skeptical that Penga could maintain its profits unless actual adoption or utility continues.
Currently, Pengu is sitting at a price of $0.04229, marking an increase of around 15% over the past seven days.
With a $66 million increase in token dumps and fraud, Pen is a warning tale of how the meme token hype cycle can backfire quickly, especially when it mixes in a hurry to sell insiders and monetize IP.
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