Shiba Inu Sees 3,894% Increase in Burn Rate, Millions of Tokens Destroyed

  • Shiba Inu has recorded a sharp rise in the burn rate of its SHIB tokens, with millions of tokens destroyed as the community pushes for a long-overdue price rally.
  • SHIB has lost 2.6% in the past day, and despite most of its technical indicators staying neutral, whales are dumping the token and creating selling pressure on exchanges.

Shiba Inu has recorded a sharp spike in the burn rate of its native SHIB token, but its price has failed to rediscover its upward trajectory as whales dump the token.

On June 5, the network burned over 4.8 million tokens in seven transactions, reports Shibburn, which reflects a 3,894% spike in the burn rate.

While the rise in the burn rate was welcomed by the community, it doesn’t do much in the grand scheme of things for SHIB. For context, the 4.8 million tokens burned on June 5 were worth a mere $122, a drop in an ocean worth $14.78 billion in overall market cap.

Still, the Shiba Inu community continues to latch onto the burns as one of the keys to a price increase. The ecosystem burned 139 million SHIB tokens in 295 burning events. At that rate, it would take the community 316,422 years to burn 90% of the 589 trillion tokens in circulation.

Clearly, burning alone can’t be the key to SHIB’s price increase. However, combined with other initiatives, it could make an impact. This week, lead developer Shytoshi Kusama claimed his team was working on a grand plan that would align with Vitalik Buterin’s hallmarks of a good meme coin project, which includes having a public good as the ultimate goal and fun mechanics.

“The north star should be: to have a project where even if eventually all tokens involved go to zero, the average person who participated is happy to have done so,” said Buterin.

For Shiba Inu, the competition comes from multiple fronts, including a long line of new and shinier meme coins, especially those built on Solana, which have become ultra-popular, such as WIF and BONK.

However, SHIB continues to hold its own. As Crypto News Flash reported, in some markets like India, SHIB is the most popular crypto overall, beating all other meme coins and even the mainstays like Bitcoin and Ethereum.

Beyond Shiba Inu, many other meme coins dipped in the past day. BONK led the losses among the major meme coins, shedding 5%, with FLOKI, BOME, WIF and PEPE each dropping around 4%. Dogecoin lost 1.8%. In the past week, FLOKI, at 17.2%, was the only major meme coin to record gains as the market soured for the fun-themed coins.

Meanwhile, investor interest remains high in PEPE, which hit $1.06 billion in 24-hour trading volume, the highest in the meme coin market. in May

How useful was this post?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.

Latest posts

default post thumbnail
Chainlink Price Could Surge To $50, Analyst Says In Bold Prediction
The Chainlink price has had a mixed performance since the turn of the new year, running up to $24 ea...
READ MORE
default post thumbnail
Bitcoin Spot ETFs See $1.86 Billion Inflows, Extend 3-Week Positive Streak
The Bitcoin Spot ETFs, one of the most exciting financial markets at the moment, closed out another ...
READ MORE
default post thumbnail
Crypto Weekly Roundup: Trump Drops Memecoin, SEC Appeals Ripple Decision, & More
This week witnessed the growing adoption of Bitcoin in traditional finances globally, as Thailand co...
READ MORE
post-thumbnail
Is Official Trump (TRUMP) a Boon or Bane for Crypto Markets?
Aside from the upcoming inauguration, which is scheduled to take place on January 20, Donald J. Trum...
READ MORE
post-thumbnail
TRUMP Overtakes SHIB in Meme Coin Battle, BTC Nears $105K (Weekend Watch)
Bitcoin’s price actions during the weekend have been quite positive, given the overall market cond...
READ MORE
post-thumbnail
Solana Hits $275 ATH! Is $300 Next in Sight?
The post Solana Hits $275 ATH! Is $300 Next in Sight? appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News The c...
READ MORE
Read more posts