ASTEROID Whales Pivot to New Memecoins but Lose All of Their Money

In a matter of hours, one of the most aggressive traders in the Solana memecoin ecosystem turned a very lucrative run into a complete wipeout.
Taking a huge loss
Previously a top whale in ASTEROID, the address that ends with MBYiv lost everything after exiting a winning position and rotating into another high-risk token. The wallet contained 52.8 million ASTEROID tokens at its height of visibility. The position closed about five hours ago at $0.00306 after being built early with an average entry of about $0.00148. The realized profit from that trade alone was about $83,700, which more than doubled the initial investment.
Source: ai_9684 on X
But that entire gain was negated by what came next. The same wallet actively rotated into the memecoin SCAM shortly after closing the ASTEROID position, committing $135,000 at an average entry price of $0.00856. It was the worst possible timing. The action was almost exactly in line with the waning hype cycle associated with Elon Musk's social media activity, which had previously encouraged speculative inflows of funds into the token.
Liquidity fully dried
After the final accumulation, the market took a dramatic turn within about half an hour. Liquidity dried up, SCAM collapsed, and the trader had to exit at a huge loss. As a result, there was an $86,800 realized deficit, which essentially eliminated all previous profits and caused the net outcome to turn negative.
This sequence demonstrates a recurrent trend in the memecoin market: profit-taking followed by overconfidence-driven reinvestment in similarly volatile assets. Following a profitable trade, traders frequently lose discipline due to the distortion of risk perception caused by the velocity of gains.
The trajectory of ASTEROID was previously discussed by U.Today, which also made clear the dangers of speculative tokens with no underlying support. This case serves to reaffirm that caution. If traders view momentum as a long-term strategy rather than a transient state, they risk losing everything even if they perform well at first.
U.Today has previously covered ASTEROID's path on the market, explicitly warning that its rapid growth was driven by speculative momentum rather than fundamentals. The outlet cautioned investors against taking unnecessary risks, noting that such assets tend to reverse just as aggressively as they rise.