According to Foresight News, citing Bloomberg and SolScan data, as of 10 AM Eastern Time on May 5th, 76% of the top 220 wallets for Donald Trump's MEME coin (addresses that can have dinner with the president) are likely located outside the United States, as these wallets use exchanges not open to US residents. Although some buyers may ignore the ban and use overseas exchanges via VPN. The data shows that among the top 25 holders registered on the website, except for 6 people, all others use exchanges outside the US. At least 56% of the top 220 holders use similar overseas exchanges. This has raised questions about how the dinner promotion participants will be screened, with their public identities only coming from their self-chosen three to four-letter usernames.
While it is difficult to determine who is behind these accounts, some public clues have emerged. A wallet named "MeCo" belongs to an entity called "Memecore", which claims to be an "EVM-compatible L1 multi-chain cross-staking mainnet protected by a Meme proof mechanism". Another user with the username "Sun" uses an HTX wallet. HTX is associated with Justin Sun, who has publicly acknowledged purchasing World Liberty Financial tokens, but has not yet revealed whether he is the owner of the top-ranked wallet.






