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Recently, I delved into Andrew Tate's activities in the crypto sphere and discovered a scheme that looks quite suspicious. It turns out that his wealth has increased through community activities far more than he publicly admits.
It all started when he launched his community platform and allegedly began randomly investing in various meme coins during live streams. His followers believed he was just having fun and not particularly interested in profit. But the deeper I dug, the clearer it became that this was a well-planned operation.
Here's the gist: low-cap meme coins are incredibly easy to manipulate. When trading volume is low and liquidity is limited, even small purchases can significantly move the price. This makes such assets ideal tools for price pumping.
It appears that Andrew Tate holds large positions in tokens like RNT, G, and DADDY. His team worked according to a clear plan: they created an attractive story, launched the coin on the platform, bought up most of the supply, and then notified him minutes before the stream. When his followers started buying after him, the price skyrocketed. Then the team sold off their positions, leaving retail investors with losses.
I found specific examples. Take the address 8wR5u3XET9rbwE5XRfSmAGdpPXs2Je7dsKDgS62Kpump — this coin was created and pumped almost instantly. At first glance, it might seem he just noticed a funny symbol by chance, but analysis shows a direct connection to his team. A second example is even more revealing: address 2VVSAJ6E3wHHcMGKs9SWAr5YujQaPVSdGn2rTWZ9pump. Here, one of his associates asked to promote the coin as much as possible, and when the masses joined in investing, the price dropped from $6 million to $50,000 within hours.
The evidence speaks for itself. One of the related wallets (GwRsHwDG2WxVhdKCLS6G5LrFay1gDCynCNi6ieLdKojk) sold the entire portfolio with a profit of over $250,000. This wallet is connected to other addresses controlling tokens within his community. Andrew Tate’s financial status is growing thanks to these kinds of operations.
What struck me most is the scale. Through these schemes, he has earned millions by exploiting the trust of his community. His popularity and millionaire status create an aura of reliability that blinds people to the manipulation.
My conclusion is simple: don’t blindly trust anyone, even well-known figures. Andrew Tate’s wealth and lifestyle are largely built on profiting from others’ gullibility. Rely on your own analysis, study on-chain data, and remember — if something sounds too good to be true, it probably is.