#LIT $LIT
$LIT The 14.68 percentage point move in Lighter (LIT) over the last ~25 hours is driven by a confluence of clear catalysts: a high-profile Bankless narrative positioning LIT as underpriced, heavy attention on its aggressive buybacks and burns, a fresh centralized exchange listing, and strong sector-wide interest in U.S-oriented perpetuals protocols.
A central driver in this window is LIT being promoted as a top undervalued perps play, especially in the U.S regulatory context.
A detailed feature argued that Lighter (LIT) is “underpriced” relative to Hyperliquid (HYPE), noting that Lighter does roughly one fifth of Hyperliquid’s crypto volume while LIT trades at only 20–25 times revenue, versus HYPE at around 70 times revenue, and that all Lighter revenue is used to buy back LIT from the market.¹The same piece and a companion article highlight that Lighter is structured as a U.S-based protocol with its token issued via a Delaware C-corp, USDC settlement, and explicit focus on entering the U.S perps market.¹²Coverage of an interview on Bankless with Lighter’s founder described how the team is actively pursuing U.S licensing and framed the onshore perps opportunity as roughly a 100 billion dollar market, with LIT rallying about 19 percent to new highs as investors reacted.²A widely circulated summary noted that “Lighter Coin (LIT) surged 31% Wednesday to break into the top 100 by market cap” after a Bankless podcast “pitched it as a top undervalued perps play.”³
Together, these positioned LIT not just as another exchange token but as the leading U.S-native onchain perps bet at a still “cheap” valuation multiple. That kind of narrative often catalyzes short-term repricing as traders recalibrate how much revenue and regulatory optionality are already “in the price.” A large part of the recent move is narrative repricing. Investors are reacting less to a single code change and more to the idea that LIT is the cleanest way to bet on regulated U.S onchain perps at a discount to peers.
The second clear driver is token-level mechanics that concentrate value in LIT holders, which social accounts have been amplifying throughout this move.
Commentary from research and trading accounts repeatedly stresses that “100% of protocol revenue [is] used to buy back LIT tokens,” with the current rally framed explicitly as being “supported by strong sector interest and an aggressive buyback model.”⁴A detailed thread explaining “Why Lighter LIT is pumping” cites:Another widely shared stat breakdown notes that Lighter has been averaging more than 90,000 LIT in buybacks per day year to date, with a highest single day buyback of about 416,000 LIT, and that the treasury now holds over 14 million LIT.⁶Shorter-horizon posts highlight the resulting performance, for example noting that a 1,000 dollar position in LIT 30 days ago would be worth 1,851 dollars today, an 85.1 percent gain, and calling it “one of the strongest charts in crypto right now.”⁷
$LIT In the 25 hour window you asked about, market participants were clearly focused on these mechanics. High protocol revenues plus aggressive buybacks and burns, combined with the majority of circulating supply being staked, naturally reduce free float. That makes each marginal unit of new demand from the Bankless narrative and new listings more powerful in moving the price. The fundamental design of LIT funnels a large share of protocol economics directly into the token and shrinks liquid supply. When attention spikes as it did in this period, these mechanics amplify the magnitude of the price move.