Jupiter Exchange is reassessing its token strategy after spending over $70 million on buybacks with minimal impact on JUP’s price, while also reducing the upcoming JUP airdrop from 700 million to 200 million tokens, as the token continues to trade nearly 89% below its peak.
Jupiter Exchange may end its JUP buyback program after failing to boost the token’s value through previous purchases. The platform spent more than $70 million last year, but the price remained near multi-month lows throughout.
JUP currently trades at around $0.205, far from its all-time high of $1.83, recorded in late 2021.
Siong, a core team member, shared that the team is now questioning whether buybacks still serve the project’s goals.
He noted that most revenue had gone into JUP repurchases, locked for three years to reduce supply and support value.
Despite that strategy, the token underperformed many Solana-based assets, raising doubts about buyback effectiveness in current market conditions. Jupiter had previously committed to using 50% of protocol fees for JUP repurchases, but that policy is now under review.
Siong opened community discussions on whether the funds could instead support product development and user rewards. This shift aligns with changing market perspectives shared by other projects with similar challenges.
The debate around JUP buybacks expanded after Amir Haleem, Helium’s founder, offered a contrasting view. Haleem said Helium and Helium Mobile made $3.4 million in revenue in October but chose not to buy tokens.
Instead, he said his team now focuses funds on growing users, expanding networks, and building useful partnerships. “Markets don’t reward buybacks the way they used to,” Haleem explained in response to Jupiter’s public post.
This perspective supported Jupiter’s internal suggestion to direct funds toward platform incentives and better features. Siong agreed that incentives for active users could bring more lasting value than token repurchases.
The team appears to be considering multiple proposals, with community input guiding the final decision. Discussions remain active on Jupiter’s governance and social platforms as the January deadline approaches.
The shift in approach comes as part of Jupiter’s broader effort to optimize long-term token distribution. That includes reevaluating the structure and size of the upcoming airdrop to balance growth with sustainability.
Jupiter announced it will reduce its JUP airdrop from 700 million to 200 million tokens to ease selling pressure. The change aims to support token stability and reward actual platform contributors more precisely.
Out of the revised allocation, 175 million JUP will go to users who have actively used the platform. The remaining 25 million JUP will be distributed to users who stake their tokens during the snapshot period.
In addition to this, Jupiter reserved 200 million JUP exclusively for stakers in a separate long-term pool. Another 300 million JUP will remain locked to support the development and expansion of the JupNet ecosystem.
A separate 300 million tokens will fund ecosystem rewards without contributing to near-term token circulation. These locked tokens are designed to strengthen Jupiter’s future without adding immediate selling pressure.
The final snapshot for the airdrop will occur on January 30, 2026, with the entry price marked at $0.20. This price serves as a reference for future distribution plans and user eligibility at the time of the snapshot.
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