Buyers keep accumulating the TRUMP token ahead of November 2025, with interest fueled by four straightforward factors: large holders are adding, paperwork for a regulated fund is under review, price action is improving, and the macro backdrop has eased. Taken together, these strands suggest tighter supply, rising institutional attention and a friendlier risk environment.
On-chain data indicate that a small group of very large addresses has increased holdings since early summer, concentrating supply in fewer hands—a setup that often precedes sharp upside moves. Some wallets tie back to publicly known investors, while others belong to funds that rarely trade small coins.
The Trump Organization booked about 802 million dollars in crypto income for the first six months of 2025, and one anonymous wallet reportedly banked roughly 116 million dollars from trading the same coin, signaling that serious capital—not just chat room traders—now rides on the price. Each strand is described in plain terms to set expectations for volatility and key confirmation signals, without assuming outcomes.
Wall Street knocks at the door
Canary Capital and at least one other firm have filed the S-1 form that starts the ETF approval clock. If the Securities besides Exchange Commission signs off, mutual funds, pension plans and corporate treasuries could buy a proxy for the token without touching the blockchain. Each week the file stays active, market watchers treat it as fresh evidence that “real” money wants in.
Analysts are watching nine dollars as the key line: a monthly close above that level would mark the first higher high since the all-time peak of 77.24 dollars, a “change of character” that implies the downtrend is over. Volatility cuts both ways—after the top, the token fell 98 percent, then bounced 475 percent from the low—so anyone buying now must accept that the ride can be equally violent in either direction.
Softer headlines on U.S.–China tariffs and futures markets pricing lower rates for late 2025 nudge fund managers toward risk, crypto included. Quiet diplomacy reduces the odds of surprise sanctions or sudden export bans this quarter, adding to the sense of stability.
If all four drivers hold, buyers should face thicker order books and faster price swings as November nears. The same setup raises the odds of quick shakeouts, because leveraged longs tend to cluster when momentum looks strong. Institutional inflows via an ETF could shrink the extra risk premium that speculative tokens carry, but timing and size depend on regulators and how much cash the first fund seeds.
