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There’s a crypto coin called PAPA Trump (PPT) that’s been popping up in search results lately. If you’ve seen it, you’re probably wondering: Is this real? Is it connected to Donald Trump? Should you buy it? The short answer: It’s a tiny, nearly worthless meme token with no official ties to Trump, almost no trading activity, and zero practical use. But let’s break down exactly what it is - and why you should treat it like a digital lottery ticket that probably won’t win.
PAPA Trump (PPT) isn’t backed by anyone - not even Trump
Despite the name, PAPA Trump has nothing to do with Donald Trump, his campaign, his organization, or any of his official teams. No press release. No tweet. No partnership. No legal agreement. Nothing. The coin was created by anonymous developers on the Solana blockchain, likely as a joke or a gamble. It’s one of hundreds of political meme coins that pop up around election seasons - like $MAGA or $BIDEN - all trying to ride the wave of online outrage or enthusiasm. But unlike some of those, PPT doesn’t even have a small community behind it.Market data shows it’s practically dead
Look at the numbers. As of late 2023 and into 2025, PPT’s market cap is listed as $0 on major platforms like Binance and CoinStats. That’s not a rounding error - it means there’s no real money being traded. CoinGecko shows a 24-hour trading volume of just $49.80. For comparison, Dogecoin trades over $300 million in a single day. PPT’s price fluctuates wildly across sites: one says $0.00000007, another says $0.079. That’s not market volatility - it’s data garbage. The price changes because two or three people traded it once, and the system overreacts. The token has a maximum supply of 100 billion coins, but the circulating supply is listed as zero. That’s a red flag. If no coins are in circulation, how can anyone own or trade them? It’s like selling tickets to a concert that never happened.It only trades on one obscure exchange
PPT isn’t listed on Coinbase, Kraken, Binance, or any other major exchange. The only place you can trade it is Raydium, a decentralized exchange on Solana. That means you need a Solana wallet like Phantom or Solflare, you need to know how to add custom tokens by pasting a contract address (which isn’t even clearly published), and you need to pay gas fees just to make a trade. For a coin worth fractions of a cent, that’s like spending $5 in gas to buy a $1 candy bar. Even then, trades are rare. CoinGecko says Raydium hasn’t had a trade in over three hours. That’s not a liquid market - it’s a ghost town.
No utility. No roadmap. No team.
What’s PPT for? Can you pay for coffee with it? No. Can you stake it to earn interest? No. Can you use it in a decentralized app? No. There’s no whitepaper. No GitHub repo. No developer updates. No Discord server. No Telegram group. No website. Nothing. It’s not a project - it’s a ticker symbol with a political name slapped on it. Compare that to Dogecoin or Shiba Inu. Even those meme coins have communities, merch, charity drives, and occasional partnerships. PPT has nothing. It’s just a name and a smart contract.Why does it even exist?
The crypto market is flooded with tokens like this. Thousands of them. Most are created in minutes using automated tools. Developers make them, list them on decentralized exchanges, and hope someone buys in during a hype cycle. Then they disappear. A 2022 study from UC Berkeley found that 92.7% of tokens ranked below #5000 in market cap become completely illiquid within 18 months. PPT is far below that. It’s in the bottom 0.1%. It survives only because of the occasional Trump supporter who buys it as a novelty - or a troll who dumps it to see if anyone bites. There’s no long-term reason for it to exist. No innovation. No value. Just noise.
Adrian Bailey
November 11, 2025 AT 13:12man i just saw this coin pop up on my feed and thought it was some new official trump thing lmao
turned out it's like a digital ghost town with a political sticker on it
the trading volume is less than what i spend on coffee in a week
and the fact that it's only on raydium? bro that's like trying to buy a car from a guy who shows up at a gas station with a clipboard
also the price changes by 300% every 5 minutes because two people traded 0.0001 coins
it's not even a scam it's just... sad
Rebecca Saffle
November 12, 2025 AT 09:39This is exactly why america is falling apart. People are gambling their last dollars on cartoon tokens with a presidential name slapped on them. No substance. No future. Just noise from people who think politics is a meme.