On-chain sleuths say a memecoin promoted alongside Ghana’s former president has all the hallmarks of a slow-motion rug: insiders have already sold hundreds of thousandsOn-chain sleuths say a memecoin promoted alongside Ghana’s former president has all the hallmarks of a slow-motion rug: insiders have already sold hundreds of thousands

Ghana ex-president–linked CWU token accused of “rug pull” as insiders dump, still hold 85%

2026/05/26 22:52
4 min read
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On-chain sleuths say a memecoin promoted alongside Ghana’s former president has all the hallmarks of a slow-motion rug: insiders have already sold hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of tokens while still controlling nearly the entire supply.

Summary
  • Bubblemaps says an address cluster tied to CWU sold around $600,000 of tokens but related wallets still hold about 85% of supply.
  • The CWU memecoin, promoted with the endorsement of former Ghanaian president John Agyekum Kufuor, previously hit a market cap near $120 million.
  • On-chain data suggests over 200 freshly funded wallets grabbed almost all the supply at launch, contradicting claims of broad circulation and raising classic rug-pull red flags.

According to on-chain analytics platform Bubblemaps, a tight cluster of addresses associated with CWU has already unloaded about $600,000 worth of tokens onto the market while retaining overwhelming control of the remaining supply. In a post flagged by Chinese outlet ChainCatcher, Bubblemaps said the connected wallets still hold roughly 85% of CWU, suggesting that what looks like retail trading is actually a thin float sitting on top of a heavily concentrated insider stash.

CWU is no random memecoin: it drew attention after being promoted as a project linked to John Agyekum Kufuor, the 10th president of Ghana, who was described in marketing materials as an “official adviser” to the token. A recent explainer from MEXC said CWU “started to gain attention as a leader in memecoin space” after being “registered with the endorsement of John Agyekum Kufuor,” helping it rally to a market cap of around $120 million and a peak price of roughly $0.135 before sliding to about $0.08, down 32% from the top.

On-chain data contradicts the project’s own tokenomics

Public messaging from the CWU team claims that 90% of the token’s total supply is “in circulation” and only 10% is reserved for the project treasury. Bubblemaps and other on-chain analyses paint a radically different picture: over 200 newly created wallets were funded in batches in the days around launch, then used to claim most of the CWU supply almost simultaneously, with those wallets now controlling roughly 87–90% of the total supply.

Bubblemaps’ case study on CWU describes “bundled supply” in which more than 200 fresh wallets “claimed most of the supply at launch and now control nearly 90% of the token,” with transfers and linkages indicating that the addresses “seem interconnected” and likely controlled by a single entity or coordinated group. MEXC’s breakdown echoes that, noting that “reports say about 90% of $CWU remains bundled,” meaning that a small network of linked wallets appears to hold almost all the tokens despite public statements about wide circulation.

That kind of structure is a textbook red flag in Bubblemaps’ own guidance on spotting rug pulls. The tool warns that when “5 wallets hold 70–90% of supply, the token is risky,” and that clusters of seemingly separate wallets that always move in concert are often “single-entity control hidden behind many addresses.” In CWU’s case, the combination of tightly clustered supply, synchronized funding of new wallets and subsequent sales into rising prices fits the pattern of a project that seeds a narrative of decentralization while retaining the ability to crash the market at will.

Political branding meets memecoin extraction

The Ghana connection makes the CWU saga more than just another structurally doomed memecoin. Using a former head of state as a promotional figure gave the token a veneer of legitimacy that many retail traders interpreted as a kind of implicit guarantee, especially when Kufuor was framed as an adviser and the project marketed itself as a “leader” in its niche. At the same time, the on-chain reality—near-total supply concentration, opaque wallet clustering, and significant insider selling while the project remains heavily illiquid—looks uncomfortably close to the kind of rug-pull choreography Bubblemaps was built to expose.

CWU has not yet gone to zero, and there is no public evidence so far that directly ties Kufuor himself to the clustered wallets or specific sell-offs. But the gap between marketing claims (“90% in circulation”) and blockchain data (around 85–90% in interconnected wallets) is stark enough that traders are already treating the token as a case study in why political branding and celebrity endorsement should never substitute for basic on-chain due diligence.

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