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🥰 Everyone needs a memecoin
Now Silicon Valley wants in on the craze

Howdy!
Here’s something cool — former SEC and CFTC chief economists Jim Overdahl and Craig Lewis co-authored a paper on Solana, and both Lightspeed writers were cited in the footnotes! This newsletter is now footnote famous.
Today, we’ve got the tech world’s sudden love for memecoins, and the Overdahl and Lewis paper.
Memecoins are cool in the tech world now
Following a string of high-profile collapses and bad press in 2022, crypto largely felt like its own market sector from which the rest of the tech world kept a cautious distance. With a memecoin-brandishing President Trump now in office, that seems to be shifting: The techies like memecoins.
Since Trump came to office, several more-mainstream tech players have either launched or endorsed memecoins — a couple of which have seen major price drawdowns, like the TRUMP token. It’s perhaps a sign that animal spirits are back in crypto, and tech players want a seat at the table, past qualms be damned.
Last night, Venmo co-founder Iqram Magdon-Ismail launched a token for his new startup, a kind of TikTok-meets-FaceTime app called JellyJelly. The token launched on the Solana memecoin launchpad pump.fun and quickly raced to over $230 million in market capitalization. Less than a day later, it crashed to under $100 million in market cap.
Magdon-Ismail said today on a podcast that one of Solana’s co-founders texted him expressing excitement about the launch, and he was in talks with someone at the Solana Foundation as well.
Sam Lessin, general partner of Slow Ventures, which invested in both Venmo and Solana, then posted a clip of himself waxing poetic about how money is just a form of communication, and memecoins are the expression of a viewpoint. Lessin promoted the memecoin on his X account, and it’s not clear how much of the token he owns, if any.
The saga came shortly after a co-founder of the defunct video sharing app Vine launched a memecoin of his own, which also saw its market cap spike before quickly retracting. Nikita Bier, an entrepreneur who has launched multiple viral social media apps, posted and then deleted a meme saying he would be launching a memecoin, too.
Silicon Valley’s new memecoin apologists tend to talk about such tokens using terms like “fun” and “community,” but not everyone thinks memecoin as a capital formation tool will prove auspicious for startups.
“I do not believe that startups launching memecoins will gain any real traction over any reasonable length of time,” Dragonfly general partner Rob Hadick said. He cited attention dilution, the negative feeling investors get from losing money and significant regulatory risk as marks against startup coins.
People in crypto and tech tend “to overreact to short-term market dynamics. We saw very similar discourse about NFTs in 2021, which turned out to be almost entirely wrong,” Hadick said.
— Jack Kubinec
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You’re not imagining it. There are in fact more new pump.fun launches than ever before.
There were 435,000 new Solana-based tokens minted on the platform last week, a new all-time high for the memecoin launchpad.
What’s interesting is all the new attention hasn’t helped traders’ odds any. Around 1.5% of pump.fun launches graduate to Raydium, which means they accumulated enough liquidity to migrate to the DEX.
— Jack Kubinec

A new paper by former SEC and CFTC chief economists Jim Overdahl and Craig Lewis makes the case for Solana’s growing relevance in institutional finance. The report details how Solana’s high-speed architecture, deep liquidity and decentralized validator set give it a structural advantage over older blockchains like Ethereum. It’s mostly stuff we’ve heard before, including a focus on Solana’s ability to support massive trading volume without fragmentation — an issue that plagues Ethereum’s reliance on layer-2s.
Where it gets interesting is that the paper also draws a clear line to regulatory considerations: SOL trades across highly liquid markets with tight spreads, deep order books and high cross-exchange price correlation — all factors regulators assess when considering asset legitimacy for institutional products. With multiple Solana-based ETFs already approved in Europe and Brazil, the report suggests that US financial products tracking SOL may not be far off.
Takeaway: Let’s be real — this isn’t about what they’re saying, it’s who’s saying it. Credibility often comes down to the messenger, not the message. Overdahl and Lewis’ analysis will likely find its way into US ETF applications and institutional pitch decks, giving Solana the kind of “institutional-grade” validation that actually moves the needle. The paper doesn’t change Solana’s reality. But it might change institutional perceptions — and that’s what really matters.
— Jeffrey Albus

A message from meow, founder of Jupiter:
