Solana Meme Coin Dogwifhat Surges 48% to Record, Beats BONK, DOGE to $2
Some meme coins are surging in anticipation of more exchange listings in the coming months.

- Dogwifhat became the first major meme coin to cross the $2 price mark.
- A listing on the prominent exchange Binance likely drove the price surge.
Solana’s runaway meme coin Dogwifhat (WIF) surged 48% in the past 24 hours to trade over $2.11 early Wednesday, reaching over $2 billion in capitalization just over three months after issuance.
Such gains were most in the meme coin category tracked on CoinGecko for tokens with over $1 billion capitalization. The category rose 2.8% on average, with lower caps like
WIF was issued in November 2023 and quickly went viral in crypto circles. Much of the token’s memetic value is derived from its connection to an image of a dog wearing a hat – and the “wif hat” usage that has caught on and grown among crypto circles.
WIF traded nearly $1 billion in the past 24 hours, CoinGecko data shows. It is the first major meme token with a price of over $1. Meme tokens usually tend to have a significantly large circulating supply – and prices of any major meme, such as dogecoin
A listing on the prominent exchange Binance likely drove such price action, with the exchange recording $219 million in WIF trades within its first day.
Anticipation of future exchange listings and popularity among retail audiences contributed to gains, as per some X posts.
gm
— Hsaka (@HsakaTrades) March 6, 2024
~2x from yesterdays lows
pre robinhood/coinbase listing + tiktok mania
liquidate the binance listing shorters pic.twitter.com/3nLebCVBZ6
Meme coins have been in focus since late February amid a bitcoin-led rally. Investors have been treating these tokens as a bet on the growth of their underlying networks, as previously reported.
UPDATE (March 6, 12:03 UTC): Rewrites headline to add record high.
Mais para você
Bitcoin could fall to $10,000 as U.S. recession risk builds, Mike McGlone says

McGlone links bitcoin’s downturn to record U.S. market cap-to-GDP levels, low equity volatility and rising gold prices, warning of potential contagion into stocks.
O que saber:
- Bloomberg Intelligence strategist Mike McGlone warns that collapsing crypto prices and a potential bitcoin slide toward $10,000 could signal mounting financial stress and foreshadow a U.S. recession.
- McGlone argues the post-2008 "buy the dip" era may be ending as crypto weakens, stock market valuations sit near century highs relative to GDP, and equity volatility remains unusually low.
- Market analyst Jason Fernandes counters that a drop to $10,000 bitcoin would likely require a severe systemic shock and recession, calling such an outcome a low-probability tail risk compared with a milder reset or consolidation.










