TL;DR
- Multiple unrelated projects use the name “ANTCOIN,” including a meme coin and a separate Ant Group trademark filing. They are not necessarily connected to the BSC contract 0x215c...4444.
- For 0x215c5538751c3334cebddbf4c769c83557494444 specifically, we couldn’t confirm an official website, whitepaper, or verified tokenomics from public sources.
- Treat all claims (like “1B supply, 6% tax, liquidity locked, ownership renounced”) as unverified unless you confirm them on-chain.
- Start with on-chain checks via BscScan and then use market tools to monitor activity.
- If you decide to trade, consider using GMGN.AI alongside BSC-native venues like PancakeSwap. Always test with a tiny amount first.
Why the “ANTCOIN” name is confusing right now
Here’s what surfaced during our research:
- A meme coin called “Antcoin” (ticker ANT) claims a 1,000,000,000 supply and a 6% transaction tax split between reflections (rewards to holders) and liquidity. At the time of writing, we cannot confirm that those claims belong to the BSC contract 0x215c...4444.
- Ant Group (Alibaba affiliate) reportedly filed a Hong Kong trademark for “AntCoin.” This is an intellectual-property move by a major fintech, not a tradable token on BNB Chain.
- Other tickers like “ANTC” or “ANT” appear on various trackers but are tied to different contracts.
Bottom line: the same or similar names are being used by different entities. Don’t assume any headline or social post about “ANTCOIN” refers to this specific BSC address.
What we can verify today
Without an official website or whitepaper that’s clearly tied to 0x215c...4444, the most reliable source is the chain itself.
- Contract and metadata: Check the token name, symbol, and decimals on BscScan. If the source code is verified, read it to see if there are taxes, blacklist functions, or admin controls.
- Ownership status: On BscScan’s “Contract” tab, look for ownership functions. “Ownership renounced” means the deployer gave up admin rights, but that doesn’t automatically make a token safe.
- Holder distribution: Review “Holders.” If one wallet controls most of the supply or LP tokens, there’s concentration risk.
- Liquidity: Inspect LP positions. Are LP tokens locked with a reputable locker? “Liquidity locked” usually means the LP tokens can’t be withdrawn for a period, reducing rug-pull risk—but you must verify the lock contract and duration.
- Taxes and transfer logic: Many meme tokens add buy/sell taxes or transfer limits. If the code isn’t clear to you, use reputable scanners and try a tiny live trade to validate tax and slippage in practice.
Quick definitions:
- Transaction tax: A fee taken on buys/sells. Often split between liquidity, marketing, or reflections to holders.
- Reflections: Automatic rewards distributed to holders from each transaction.
- Honeypot: A malicious setup where you can buy but cannot sell.
Claimed tokenomics vs. verified reality
The “1B supply and 6% tax” structure is a common meme-coin template. However, we have not found definitive proof tying those specifics to 0x215c...4444. Treat such claims as unverified marketing until you can confirm them via code, events, or live trades.
To validate:
- Confirm total supply on BscScan.
- Look for tax/fee variables in the verified contract, or infer effective tax by testing a tiny swap and comparing expected vs. received amounts.
Tools to track, analyze, and trade
- GMGN.AI: For real-time meme token tracking, smart money flows, and trading, see the ANTCOIN page on GMGN.AI. GMGN.AI offers:
- Smart money tracking: Follow notable wallets to spot early trends.
- Automated trading (optional): You can mirror strategies or set rules; this requires linking a Telegram account via https://t.me/gmgnaibot?start=i_fV1R5sZ5.
- Risk checks: Surface common hazards like honeypots or high taxes before you aped in.
- BscScan: Start every investigation here: token page and contract.
- PancakeSwap: If there’s active liquidity, you can attempt a small test trade via PancakeSwap. Start with the tiniest amount to gauge slippage, tax, and sellability.
Note: Availability on any interface depends on whether a valid trading pair and sufficient liquidity exist. If a swap fails, it could be due to no liquidity, restrictive transfer logic, or a honeypot mechanism.
Safety checklist before you trade
- Verify the contract: Match the exact address (0x215c...4444) each time. Copycats are common.
- Read the code (or use trusted scanners): Look for taxes, blacklist/whitelist features, trading toggles, and maximum transaction limits.
- Confirm liquidity: Is there a stable LP? Are LP tokens locked? For how long, and with which locker?
- Check holders and top wallets: Excessive concentration can be a red flag for dumps.
- Test buy/sell with a tiny amount: Validate that selling works and see the real, effective tax.
- Watch social claims: If a project says “ownership renounced,” “liquidity locked,” or “charity-backed,” ask for verifiable proof (lock links, renounce transaction hash, charity wallet receipts).
- Don’t confuse identities: Ant Group’s “AntCoin” trademark is a separate corporate IP matter, not a tradable BSC token.
What this means for builders and traders
- Builders: If you’re competing for attention in the meme segment, clarity matters. Publish signed, verifiable links (website, X/Twitter, docs) from the project’s deployer address to reduce confusion with same-name tokens.
- Traders: In a noisy market, on-chain facts beat narratives. Use BscScan for verification and pair it with a live market tool like GMGN.AI for momentum, wallet flow, and execution.
Final word
At the time of publication, we cannot definitively tie popular “ANTCOIN” narratives to the BSC contract 0x215c5538751c3334cebddbf4c769c83557494444. If you engage, do so with caution, verify on-chain, and start small. For discovery and tracking, combine block explorer checks with real-time dashboards like GMGN.AI, and if liquidity is present, test trades via trusted BSC venues such as PancakeSwap.