For years, Eric Adams has promised to turn the Big Apple into the world’s digital asset capital. But on the 12th of January, the Crypto Mayor’s legacy took a sharp, technical turn into controversy.
Just minutes after the launch of his NYC Token, on-chain detectives at Bubblemaps flagged a series of suspicious liquidity maneuvers.
While the token was pitched at a Times Square press conference as a tool to fight antisemitism and fund education, the blockchain told a colder story.
Details of the NYC token’s rug pull event
According to on-chain data, a wallet directly linked to the NYC token deployer funneled 80 million coins into a decentralized exchange (DEX) liquidity pool, only to execute a high-speed USDC cycle.
As retail investors FOMO’d in, a deployer-linked wallet executed a surgical extraction, pulling $3.4 million in USDC at the absolute top.
The account allegedly withdrew $2.43 million in USDC at the token’s price peak, then waited for a 60% price collapse before re-injecting $1.5 million.
This resulted in a nearly $932,000 liquidity gap that has vanished into a creator-linked wallet, leaving retail investors holding the bag of a token that plummeted 80% in its first thirty minutes of life.
Community reaction
This left the crypto community in a state of bizarre disbelief, as highlighted by an X user who noted,
“Just when we think crypto is evolving, stuff like this happens.”
Echoing similar sentiments, another user added,
“Crypto is ruined by scammers like this.”
Some even took this as an ongoing thing and commented,
“Nothing to see here folks. Same old rug pull game on Solana.”
The rise of political memecoins
That said, by launching $NYC, Adams has effectively benchmarked his personal brand against established political assets like Donald Trump’s TRUMP and Melania Trump’s MELANIA.
However, unlike the Trump-themed predecessors, which often rely on community-driven hype, the $NYC launch has set a troubling precedent.
It shows how easily civic fundraising can turn into exploitation when political campaigns launch tokens directly on decentralized exchanges.
Remarking on the same, CoinTerminal noted,
“Politicians launching memecoins was never going to end well.”
Echoing similar sentiments, another account added,
“A million NYC coins says the SEC does nothing about it and he doesnt even get investigated.”
What’s more?
This followed a shift in investors as 2026 kicked in. The beginning of the year drove a 20% memecoin rally that added $10 billion to the sector in less than a fortnight.
This speculative appetite has vastly outpaced the broader market, with the TOTAL3 index (which tracks the market cap excluding BTC and ETH) rising a modest 6% by comparison.
However, the NYC token’s 80% collapse serves as a grim reminder of the costs of this volatility.
Final Thoughts
- The NYC Token launch shows how quickly political credibility can be tokenized and just as quickly liquidated.
- Community backlash and industry commentary signal eroding trust, not just in tokens, but in political crypto ventures broadly.
Source: https://ambcrypto.com/from-times-square-to-zero-bids-inside-nyc-tokens-30-minute-collapse/