Former New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ NYC meme coin has drawn heavy criticism from the crypto community after plunging more than 80%, pushing its market capitalization below $100 million.
While both Adams and the project’s team deny any wrongdoing, unusual liquidity movements raised red flags, prompting some analysts to characterize the token as a potential rug pull. In an exclusive interview with BeInCrypto, a Nansen analyst outlined 4 reasons why NYC token appears to fit the broader definition of “rug pulls.”
Earlier this week, BeInCrypto reported that Adams revealed the token at Times Square. It surged shortly after its launch, but the rally was unsustainable.
Blockchain analysts identified unusual liquidity behavior. Rune Crypto alleged that Adams removed $3.4 million from the token’s liquidity pool. Bubblemaps also identified suspicious liquidity activity.
In a separate post, Bubblemaps highlighted the fallout from the NYC token. Around 4,300 traders interacted with the NYC token, with roughly 60% recording losses.
Nicolai Sondergaard, Research Analyst at Nansen, told BeInCrypto that the reason the NYC token can be grouped with other rug pulls is due to how liquidity was removed. The analyst outlined 4 key reasons:
He explained that removing liquidity, even partially, significantly increases the impact of a single sell order. A sell order that would not have significantly affected the price under normal liquidity conditions can suddenly move the market much more, often triggering panic, cascades of sell-offs, and even forcing traders with limit orders out of their positions.
Sondergaard emphasized that, from a market integrity standpoint, clear and transparent communication around liquidity is essential. Why? Because traders cannot accurately assess risk if liquidity can disappear without warning.
He mentioned that incidents like this undermine trust across the broader ecosystem. The analyst added that better transparency standards, combined with analytics-driven oversight, could help distinguish legitimate projects from bad actors. Sondergaard suggested that,
Amid this backlash, the former mayor’s spokesperson, Todd Shapiro, shared a statement, pushing back against the claims. He denied reports that Adams moved investor funds or profited from the NYC token’s launch, stating the allegations are false and unsupported by evidence.
The spokesperson noted that NYC Token experienced price volatility typical of newly launched digital assets. He reiterated Adams’ commitment to transparency, accountability, and responsible innovation.
Previously, the NYC Token team attributed the liquidity movements to a rebalancing process following strong demand at launch.

