Why the Secondary Market Is the Real Test for Any Token's Economic Design
-

A token can generate enormous attention before launch. It can secure major exchange listings, complete a high-profile airdrop, and build genuine early momentum. But once it starts trading freely on the open market, the real test begins. The market quickly reveals whether actual demand exists beyond the launch phase, and projects that focused their tokenomics primarily on distribution tend to fail this test fast. Team allocations, investor shares, ecosystem funds, and community pools may all be clearly defined, yet the model says almost nothing about why anyone would want to acquire the token weeks or months after the initial excitement fades.
This is why stronger tokenomics models study secondary market circulation before the token ever launches. Mechanisms like buybacks, revenue sharing, token sinks, and well-balanced reward structures all play a role in reducing unnecessary sell pressure and giving the token a reason to stay relevant beyond its first wave of attention. Founders who work through this before launch are forced to connect the token to real business logic, asking whether the project generates enough revenue, whether utility demand is genuine, and whether the user base has real reasons to stay. A token with vague utility and no secondary demand mechanism is essentially designed to decline. A token built around defined economic functions has at least a foundation to sustain value when market conditions get difficult.
-
Buybacks revenue sharing sinks - yes