Rebeca Moen
Oct 02, 2025 15:10
Amid a 45% decline in Plasma’s token XPL, CEO Paul Faecks has denied allegations of insider trading and team selling.
The cryptocurrency community erupted in accusations this week as Plasma’s native token XPL plummeted more than 45% from its peak, prompting the project’s founder to vehemently deny claims of insider trading and coordinated selling by team members.
Paul Faecks, co-founder and CEO of the Layer 1 blockchain platform, took to social media on October 1st to address mounting speculation that Plasma insiders had dumped their token allocations following XPL’s meteoric rise and subsequent crash. The token, which debuted around $1.00 in late September, surged to an all-time high of $1.69 on September 28th before plunging to lows of $0.74 within days.
“No team members have sold any XPL. All investor and team XPL is locked for 3 years with a 1-year cliff,” Faecks stated emphatically in his public response to the allegations. The dramatic price volatility has left the token trading around $0.90 as of late October, representing a staggering decline from its peak performance.
Community Skepticism Grows
The sharp selloff triggered a wave of criticism across crypto social media platforms, with community members pointing to suspicious on-chain activity that preceded the token’s launch. Independent blockchain investigator ManaMoon identified transfers of over 600 million XPL tokens from team wallets to major exchanges before the public launch, fueling speculation about coordinated selling strategies.
Critics alleged that Plasma employed Time-Weighted Average Price (TWAP) selling tactics, a sophisticated method that breaks large sell orders into smaller, time-distributed trades to minimize market impact while maximizing liquidation efficiency. The technique is commonly used by institutional players to exit large positions without triggering dramatic price movements.
“The pattern we’re seeing with XPL is textbook algorithmic distribution,” said Marcus Chen, a crypto market analyst at Digital Asset Research. “When you see this volume of tokens moving to exchanges pre-launch combined with the subsequent price action, it raises legitimate questions about coordination.”
Wintermute Speculation Denied
Adding fuel to the controversy, some community members speculated about potential involvement from Wintermute, a prominent crypto market-making firm known for providing liquidity services to major token launches. Social media users, including prominent crypto commentator crypto_popseye, suggested possible collusion between Plasma and the algorithmic trading firm.
Faecks categorically denied any business relationship with Wintermute, stating that Plasma “has not engaged Wintermute as a market maker and has never contracted Wintermute for any of their services.” He emphasized that the company possesses no insider knowledge about Wintermute’s potential token holdings beyond publicly available blockchain data.
The CEO also pushed back against characterizations of Plasma as an “ex-Blast” project, clarifying that only three of the company’s approximately 50 employees had previous experience with Blur or Blast platforms. He highlighted that the team includes veterans from major technology and financial institutions including Google, Facebook, Square, Goldman Sachs, and Temasek.
Market Data Reveals Mixed Signals
On-chain analytics paint a complex picture of XPL’s post-launch performance. Trading volumes collapsed from $63.5 million to $10 million during the token’s decline, while over 85% of the top 20 traders exited their positions within the first week of launch. The token’s liquidity ratios remained below industry standards at 0.09%, according to market data providers.
However, Plasma reported impressive fundamental metrics, with Total Value Locked (TVL) reaching $4 billion within six days of launch, backed by strategic partnerships with Tether and Bitfinex. This disconnect between price performance and protocol adoption has created division among analysts about XPL’s long-term prospects.
“While the tokenomics and launch execution appear questionable, the underlying protocol metrics suggest genuine utility and adoption,” noted Sarah Rodriguez, senior researcher at Blockchain Capital Insights. “The challenge for Plasma will be rebuilding community trust after this rocky start.”
Lingering Questions
Despite Faecks’ public denials, some community members remain unconvinced, pointing to careful wording in his statements that addressed only team and investor allocations. Critics noted that ecosystem and growth tokens, which typically represent significant portions of total supply, were not explicitly mentioned in the CEO’s clarifications.
The controversy highlights ongoing challenges facing new cryptocurrency projects in maintaining community confidence while navigating complex tokenomics and market dynamics. As XPL continues trading near $0.95 with modest daily volatility, market participants await further developments in Plasma’s efforts to restore credibility and drive sustainable growth.
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