CWU, a memecoin promoted with links to former Ghana President John Agyekum Kufuor, is facing fresh scrutiny after on-chain analysts said connected wallets sold about $600,000 worth of tokens while still controlling most of the supply.
Blockchain analytics platform Bubblemaps said a cluster of wallets tied to CWU has continued selling into the market while retaining roughly 85% of the token supply. The platform described the wallet structure as a warning sign because a large share of supply appears to remain concentrated among linked addresses.

CWU gained market attention after promotional materials described Kufuor, Ghana’s former president, as an official adviser to the project. The token later reached a market capitalization near $120 million and a reported peak price of about $0.135 before falling toward $0.08.
Bubblemaps first raised concerns about CWU after identifying more than 200 newly created wallets that were funded in batches before the token launched on April 9. These wallets reportedly had no prior activity, claimed CWU tokens shortly after launch and later controlled about 87% of the supply.
The analytics firm said the wallets appeared interconnected and may be controlled by one entity or a coordinated group. Bubblemaps also said the deployer used a whitelist function on Meteora before trading began, which may explain how the wallets were able to claim large amounts of CWU at launch.
The CWU team has publicly stated that 90% of the token supply was allocated to circulation and 10% to the treasury. Bubblemaps said the on-chain data appears inconsistent with that claim, because most of the supply seems to sit inside linked wallets rather than being widely distributed.
A high concentration of supply can create risks for traders. If a small number of wallets control most tokens, those holders may be able to move the market quickly through large sales.
The project’s connection to Kufuor has drawn attention beyond the usual memecoin market. Marketing around CWU described the former president as an adviser, giving the token a political profile that may have influenced retail interest.
There is no public evidence in the material reviewed that directly connects Kufuor to the wallet cluster or to token sales. The current concerns are focused on CWU’s supply structure, token distribution and the role of linked wallets in market activity.
Bubblemaps also pointed to the main account promoting CWU, which claimed to belong to Sheikh Saoud, a UAE royal family member. The account reportedly joined X in March and made its first post on April 7, shortly before the token launch. Analysts described the timing as another point requiring caution.
Crypto markets have seen several cases where public figures, political names or celebrity branding were used to build trust in new tokens. In many cases, traders later looked to on-chain data to verify whether supply was actually distributed as claimed.
The main dispute around CWU centers on the gap between public tokenomics and blockchain records. The project said most supply was in circulation, while Bubblemaps said 85% to 90% may still be controlled by clustered wallets.
On-chain analysis cannot always prove who controls a wallet. However, repeated funding patterns, synchronized token claims and connected transfers can suggest coordination among addresses.
Bubblemaps said the cluster has already sold about $600,000 worth of CWU while still holding most of the supply. That pattern has led some traders to call the token a possible slow-moving “rug pull,” although CWU has not collapsed to zero and no court or regulator has issued a public finding against the project.
The case has become another example of why traders monitor wallet distribution before buying new tokens. A token may appear active in open markets, but a thin float can make prices vulnerable if large holders begin selling.
The post Ghana Ex-President-Linked CWU Token Faces Rug Pull Claims After Insider Sales appeared first on CoinCentral.

