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There's something interesting happening in the crypto capital markets right now that most people aren't talking about enough. While everyone's focused on new token launches, institutional money is quietly rotating into a completely different asset class.
According to recent market research, the token launch space is in serious trouble. More than 80% of new token offerings across major exchanges are trading below their initial generation event prices. We're talking about typical drops of 50-70% occurring around 90 days post-listing. That's not a small correction—that's a structural problem. Tokens like ALT have become textbook examples of this broader failure pattern in initial exchange offerings and new token debuts.
What's fascinating is the contrast. While token launches are struggling, crypto companies going public through traditional channels are absolutely crushing it. In 2025, crypto-related IPOs hit $14.6 billion—a sharp jump from the year before. M&A activity in the space reached $42.5 billion, the highest we've seen in five years. Publicly traded crypto companies like Circle and Gemini are trading at 7-40x sales multiples, while tokens are stuck at 2-16x. That's a massive valuation gap.
The managing partner at DWF Labs, Andrei Grachev, broke down why this is happening. The main culprit is selling pressure from airdrops and early investor lockups expiring. When vesting schedules unlock, you get a wall of supply hitting the market with no corresponding demand. It's mechanical, predictable, and brutal. But here's the key point Grachev made—this isn't capital leaving crypto. It's capital rotating from speculative token plays to regulated, mature companies with actual reporting standards and institutional credibility.
WeFi's CEO Maksym Sakharov confirmed this from the institutional side. Serious money prefers regulated markets, transparent reporting, and accessibility through traditional channels. The initial exchange offering news cycle keeps churning out new projects, but sophisticated investors are looking elsewhere.
Looking at ALT as a current case study—the token is trading around $0.01 with a 24-hour change of -2.20%, RSI at oversold levels, and bearish technical signals. The short-term support levels are $0.0070 and $0.0065, with resistance at $0.0076. This is the reality of where many tokens end up after the initial launch hype fades.
The broader narrative here is clear: if you're an institutional investor with serious capital, why take the risk on volatile token launches when you can buy shares in regulated crypto companies with actual revenue models and governance? The market is speaking loudly about where the real opportunity lies. The token launch news cycle will keep producing winners and losers, but the structural shift toward public markets and traditional securities seems like the more rational play for institutions managing real money.