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Aptos (APT) Price Down 90%—But Here’s Why Major Investors Aren’t Walking Away

December 5, 2025
in Politics
Aptos (APT) Price Down 90%—But Here’s Why Major Investors Aren’t Walking Away

The post Aptos (APT) Price Down 90%—But Here’s Why Major Investors Aren’t Walking Away appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Aptos has become one of the toughest stories in the altcoin market this year. The APT price has collapsed nearly 90% from its highs close to $20, turning what was once a next-gen Layer-1 contender into one of the most heavily discounted cryptos of the cycle. Retail faith has evaporated, builders have gone quiet, and social sentiment has flatlined. Yet, one group still hasn’t walked away—the major investors who backed Aptos early.

A Crisis Driven by Tokenomics, Not Technology

Aptos is not in trouble because its tech lags behind competitors. It’s struggling because its tokenomics worked against its own ecosystem.

A massive total supply of 1.18 billion APT and a circulating supply already crossing 733 million created a relentless supply overhang. Monthly unlocks of 11.3 million tokens continuously flood the market, generating steady sell pressure. November’s unlock—worth tens of millions—lined up with yet another sharp dump.

The unlock design was too aggressive for a young L1 still trying to build narrative momentum. Staking exacerbated the issue: almost 80% of the supply is staked at ~7% yield. This looks healthy on paper, but creates:

  • Continuous dilution
  • Locked liquidity
  • A shortage of new buyers whenever the unlocks hit

This combination crushed momentum long before the market did.

A Chain Without a Clear Identity in a Competitive Market

The ecosystem’s challenge isn’t inactivity—it’s direction. On-chain data shows stablecoin growth, RWA initiatives, and partnerships, yet no breakout consumer app to define Aptos.

Meanwhile:

  • Solana captured retail culture, DEX dominance, and meme velocity
  • Sui gained developer mindshare in the Move-language niche
  • Ethereum L2s pulled in real DeFi capital

Aptos ended up in the middle—good tech, but no narrative powerful enough to attract attention in a market where attention is oxygen.

So Why Haven’t Big Investors Left?

Despite the brutal year, Aptos still holds long-term value drivers that institutional backers care about:

  1. Genuine RWA Traction: Aptos is quietly becoming a serious player in real-world asset infrastructure, with Paxos, BlackRock-linked initiatives, and other enterprise players building rails on the network.
  1. Rising App Revenue: Even as the token bleeds, protocol revenue and user engagement have improved—suggesting that the ecosystem is maturing beneath the surface.
  1. Big Backers Play the Long Game: Major investors rarely abandon a project during drawdowns. As long as fundamentals hold—developer talent, scalability, and Move-based security—Aptos remains a long-term bet worth defending.

The Road to Recovery: A Necessary Reset

Aptos is not dead. It’s at a reset phase, and the next steps will determine its future. Critical fixes include:

  • Tokenomic restructuring: burns, reduced unlock velocity, sustainable staking
  • Introducing liquid staking to unlock liquidity without mass selling
  • Building at least one viral consumer app
  • Owning a strong identity: “Institutional-grade RWAs + AI tooling on Move.”

If Aptos can execute even half of this ahead of the next liquidity cycle, a recovery toward the $5–$6 range becomes realistic. Beyond that, new highs depend on one thing alone—delivery, not promises.

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