Pump.fun, a Solana-based token launch platform, has introduced $USDC-paired liquidity pools as an alternative to its existing $SOL-paired bonding curve mechanism.
The move comes as $SOL price changes pushed bonding curves to their limits, with starting market caps dropping to approximately $2,000 and bonding occurring at ~$30,000. $USDC pairs establish a $4,000 starting market cap and $58,783 bonding threshold, designed to create more stable trading conditions and fairer token distribution for early-stage coins.
The structural change makes early-stage token supply significantly more expensive to acquire. Bonding a $USDC-paired token costs ~$12,161 compared to ~$7,276 for $SOL tokens—a 67% increase. Purchasing the first 30% of supply costs ~$1,682 for $USDC tokens versus ~$998 for $SOL tokens. Pump.fun positions this higher entry cost as a mechanism to prevent supply abuse and mitigate token upside throttling at lower market capitalizations.
The platform highlighted that $USDC pairs reduce retail friction by eliminating reliance on $SOL price fluctuations, which previously caused wallet balance volatility during trades. This structure was "designed with stability and more importantly a healthier ecosystem in mind," according to the announcement.
The $USDC pairs feature does not alter Pump.fun's existing commitment to programmatic buybacks and burns of its native $PUMP token. The platform will continue directing 50% of all revenue generated from both $USDC and $SOL pair launches toward purchasing and burning $PUMP tokens, consistent with historical buyback operations visible on-chain.
Sources: Pump.fun Official Announcement | Solscan Example Buyback Transaction
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