
World Liberty Financial (WLFI), a Trump-linked DeFi platform, shocked the crypto world by endorsing a grotesque Solana memecoin named SPSC.
Author: Sahil Thakur
Published On: Thu, 27 Nov 2025 01:56:26 GMT
27 November 2025 – In a twist few saw coming, World Liberty Financial (WLFI), a Trump-linked DeFi platform, shocked the crypto world by endorsing a grotesque Solana memecoin named SPSC – short for Shit Piss Skin Can. The move, which appeared across WLFI’s official social channels around November 24–25, 2025, immediately set off a frenzy in the market.
WLFI had built its image on serious DeFi tools like its USD1 stablecoin, integrated with mainstream payment apps and backed by partnerships like a $3 billion initiative with Bithumb. Therefore, its sudden support of a coin with one of the most deliberately offensive names in crypto history raised eyebrows and drew ridicule. Many in the community labeled the promotion “unreal,” “disgusting,” or simply “peak 2025.”
The WLFI team posted that it was “Buying $SPSC because the trenches finally found religion in USD1 memes”. The announcement tied SPSC to WLFI’s broader “USD1 is just the beginning” narrative. While some saw this as a genuine nod to degen meme culture, others believed it was a calculated attempt to break into Solana’s viral memecoin scene.
The WLFI community, and crypto X at large, erupted. Supporters cheered the crossover, while critics mocked the platform’s shift from stablecoins to a coin named after bodily waste. Even longtime WLFI backers expressed discomfort, with comments like “I love the vision but please delete this.”
SPSC, which had previously circulated in niche “trenches” (degen trading circles), suddenly became a breakout meme token. Prior to the shill, it had traded below a $1 million market cap. Within hours, it surged to as high as $15 million.
The price of SPSC jumped from $0.0005 to as high as $0.0083 in a matter of minutes, posting a gain of over 140%. Traders reported 6x to 400x flips, with some wallets netting over 150 SOL in profits. Tools like atm.day flagged the coin repeatedly, further fueling speculative frenzy.
Volume exploded past $12 million, and major Solana traders noticed whale inflows well before the public pump. SPSC futures on BingX also heated up rapidly. The memecoin briefly became the hottest trade on Solana.
The absurd name traces back to WLFI co-founder Chase Herro. According to lore, Herro once joked that a good story could sell even a can filled with “shit, piss, and skin flakes.” Community members took that literally, launching SPSC as the most unhinged memecoin of the year. Its success was meant to prove Herro right.
This background made WLFI’s endorsement even more surreal. It blended political branding, DeFi seriousness, and full-blown meme absurdity into one viral event.
Reaction was immediate and visceral. Crypto influencers joked, “They went from a $3B Bithumb stablecoin to tweeting out Shit Piss Skin Can.” Posts filled with vomiting emojis and “WTF did I just read?” replies flooded X. Yet, many traders admitted to aping in simply because “WLFI said so.”
Some warned of a repeat of the previous $1 token dump, which had crashed 85% after WLFI’s hype. Still, no large backlash followed this time, and volatility became part of the fun.
WLFI’s move may have opened the door to more meme experimentation. It signaled a willingness to engage with crypto’s degenerate edge to build brand momentum. It also hinted at deeper involvement in Solana’s ecosystem, especially through USD1-based meme pairings.
By November 27, SPSC had retraced to ~$0.0063, yet remained well above its pre-shill price. Traders now watch WLFI’s next move, wondering whether this was a one-off joke or a new strategy.
Real voices. Real reactions.
@worldlibertyfi so this is the future of finance they were telling me so much about https://t.co/3Ekx7R0Qqy

@worldlibertyfi Yeah idk about this one bud Even by your standards this is quite crimey https://t.co/P1LkpwO6Fc

@worldlibertyfi actually at a loss for words on this one
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