Movement Network’s utility token, MOVE, plunged by over 20% in just 24 hours as investors fled amid leadership chaos and market concerns.
Since launching its mainnet beta and token in December 2024, the Ethereum Layer-2 modular network has greatly underperformed.
Despite reaching a $2.5 billion market cap in early January, fueled by a $100 million Series B round valuing the project at $3 billion, $MOVE’s current market cap has collapsed to under $500 million, marking a 70% decline.
Much of the $MOVE token’s downward pressure has been attributed to poor market-making strategies and recent governance challenges.
In the early hours of May 2, Movement Labs announced the suspension of co-founder Rushi Manche, citing an ongoing third-party review of governance procedures and market maker-related activities.
https://twitter.com/movementlabsxyz/status/1918134801028268187
Popular crypto influencer Ansem, an early investor in the project, expressed his frustration on X (formerly Twitter), calling $MOVE “the worst investment” he has ever made.
Further intensifying the situation, Coinbase announced it would suspend trading of $MOVE on May 15, transitioning order books to limit-only mode.
This comes weeks after Binance froze the profits of a market maker accused of offloading large volumes of $MOVE, prompting questions about the project’s token distribution and management.
Internal investigations have revealed that 5% of $MOVE tokens allocated to Web3Port somehow ended up with Rentech, a firm that quickly liquidated its position.
Co-founder Cooper Scanlon disclosed in a Slack message that the situation was being reviewed.
Documents from a third-party review alleged that there were incentives to pump $MOVE’s fully diluted value (FDV) to $5 billion before dumping tokens on the open market.
The agreement stipulated that if this FDV threshold was reached, Rentech could sell and share profits with others, raising suspicions about Manche’s involvement, as he was linked to sharing the agreement.
On April 30, Manche took to X to acknowledge missteps, stating the team “trusted the wrong advisors” and mishandled operations during a turbulent market.
Investigations are ongoing into whether Manche or advisors were more deeply involved than previously disclosed.
Despite the controversies, some traders see an opportunity to buy the dip.
According to CoinGlass, $MOVE’s open interest surged by 50.65%, while trading volume skyrocketed by 695%, surpassing $1.3 billion in the past 24 hours.
The long/short ratio currently stands at 0.9778, with more than $1.3 million worth of short positions liquidated, suggesting some traders are betting on a potential short squeeze or reversal.
Technically, the $MOVE/USDT daily chart has shown a persistent downtrend throughout 2025, characterized by lower highs and lower lows.
However, the price appears to be stabilizing within the $0.11 to $0.13 range, aligning with the 0.236 Fibonacci retracement level, a zone that could act as short-term support.
The $MOVE token approaches the upper boundary of a falling wedge pattern, a formation typically viewed as a bullish reversal pattern.
A confirmed breakout above this wedge, especially with a daily close above the 9-day SMA at $0.2307, could mark a potential trend reversal.
Should this breakout occur, Fibonacci extensions point to possible resistance levels at $0.2950, $0.4248, $0.5547, and $0.6349.
On the flip side, failure to hold above the support zone around $0.1185 or $0.0849 could result in further downside and continued investor pessimism.
The post $MOVE Sinks 70%—Founder Suspended, Coinbase Pauses Trading. What’s Next? appeared first on Cryptonews.