Here are some reasons and facts:
1. No Official Endorsement
Neither Donald Trump nor Melania has officially launched or supported any crypto token (unless it's part of a confirmed NFT collection, like Trump’s NFT trading cards).
If a coin claims "Trump-backed", it's almost always false marketing.
2. Hype-Based Meme Coins
These coins use celebrity names to grab attention and make people believe they’ll "go to the moon".
But they often have no use case, no team, and no roadmap.
3. Pump-and-Dump Strategy
The creators and early buyers promote the coin, watch it pump, and then sell off their holdings when enough people FOMO in — crashing the price and leaving new buyers with big losses.
4. No Transparency
Most Trump or Melania tokens don’t have whitepapers, audited contracts, or transparent teams.
That’s a red flag. It's often the same scam formula recycled with new branding.
5. Fake Listings and Hype
Some tokens fake claims about "getting listed on major exchanges" or "partnerships" — all to push the price temporarily.
Once people buy in, the token value drops fast — sometimes to zero.
✅ Stay Safe
If a coin uses a celebrity name but has no official connection, avoid it.
Check for verified team, real development, and audited contracts.
Don’t let hype or FOMO make you ignore basic safety rules.
#BinanceAlphaAlert #Trumpindump #scum $SOL $TRUMP $MELANIA