Buyback doesn't move the needle like most think. Strip away the marketing, and what actually matters? Simple supply and demand mechanics. When you dig into token economics, the real driver isn't some clever tokenomics design or a flashy buyback program—it's the raw relationship between how many tokens are circulating and who wants them. More sellers than buyers? Price goes down, regardless of any narrative. Reversed? Price tends upward. This is why so many projects obsess over the wrong things. They pump buyback stories to distract from weak fundamentals. But the market doesn't care about the story; it cares about the math. Supply pressures, demand dynamics, liquidity flows—these are the boring but unbreakable rules.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
16 Likes
Reward
16
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
TokenomicsTinfoilHat
· 01-10 12:50
In plain terms, buybacks are just a smokescreen to cover weak fundamentals...
View OriginalReply0
LiquidationTherapist
· 01-10 12:50
In simple terms, buybacks are just a story; the real driving force is still the supply and demand relationship.
View OriginalReply0
Layer2Arbitrageur
· 01-10 12:37
lmao buyback theater is just cope for projects with negative token velocity. actually ran the numbers—most of these programs dump ~40-60bps per quarter while marketing screams "value accrual." supply/demand is literally the only variable that matters, everything else is calldata noise. ngmi if you're still believing the narrative.
Reply0
LiquidationWatcher
· 01-10 12:37
ngl been screaming this for years... buyback hype is just cope for projects with trash fundamentals. seen too many collapse anyway lmao
Reply0
ChainMemeDealer
· 01-10 12:31
Well said, buybacks are just a cover-up. At the end of the day, it's still about supply and demand.
Buyback doesn't move the needle like most think. Strip away the marketing, and what actually matters? Simple supply and demand mechanics. When you dig into token economics, the real driver isn't some clever tokenomics design or a flashy buyback program—it's the raw relationship between how many tokens are circulating and who wants them. More sellers than buyers? Price goes down, regardless of any narrative. Reversed? Price tends upward. This is why so many projects obsess over the wrong things. They pump buyback stories to distract from weak fundamentals. But the market doesn't care about the story; it cares about the math. Supply pressures, demand dynamics, liquidity flows—these are the boring but unbreakable rules.