Token burning in cryptocurrency refers to the process of permanently removing a certain amount of tokens or coins from circulation. This is typically done to reduce the total supply, which can potentially increase scarcity and value for the remaining tokens (similar to how stock buybacks work in traditional finance). It's a common mechanism in many blockchain projects, especially those with deflationary models. How Token Burning Works Mechanism: Tokens are "burned" by sending them to a dead-end wallet address (often called a "burn address" or "black hole") that no one controls or can access. This address is usually something like 0x000000000000000000000000000000000000dead in Ethereum-based networks. Once sent there, the tokens are effectively out of circulation forever, as there's no private key to retrieve them. Implementation Methods: Manual Burns: Project teams or holders manually transfer tokens to the burn address. Automated Burns: Built into the protocol, such as a percentage of transaction fees being burned automatically (e.g., in Binance Coin or some DeFi tokens). Proof-of-Burn (PoB): A consensus mechanism where users burn coins to gain mining rights or validate transactions, proving commitment to the network. Reasons for Burning: Supply Control: To combat inflation by decreasing the circulating supply over time. Value Appreciation: Reducing supply can drive up demand and price if adoption remains steady (though this isn't guaranteed and depends on market dynamics). Incentives: Used in tokenomics to reward holders, fund development, or as part of upgrades (e.g., Ethereum's EIP-1559 burns a portion of base fees from transactions). Error Correction: Sometimes to remove accidentally minted tokens or fix bugs. Examples Ethereum (ETH): Since the London Hard Fork in 2021, a portion of every transaction fee is burned, making ETH deflationary during high network activity. Over 4 million ETH have been burned to date. Binance Coin (BNB): Binance conducts quarterly burns based on trading volume, aiming to reduce supply from 200 million to 100 million tokens. Shiba Inu (SHIB): Community-driven burns where holders voluntarily send tokens to burn addresses, often tied to events or portals. Terra (LUNA): Before its collapse, it used burning to stabilize its algorithmic stablecoin, though that didn't prevent issues. Burning doesn't always lead to price increases— @Green Or Red @paodun @ISN⁹¹
$BNB Does it feel boring now? This time is actually the most important.
According to Elliott Wave, the market generally moves like this: 📈 First a strong upside move cycle 1 ⏸️ Then some days of correction cycle 2 🚀 Then another big move Wave 3 Currently, BNB is in that correction phase, which is very important for the next big move. 📊 What the chart indicates: The Weekly Elliott Wave structure is still bullish 700–800 zone is a potential buying / accumulation area If the cycle holds, higher targets may open in the next phase ⚠️ This is not about trying to catch the exact bottom. It's about cycle + patience + long-term thinking. What do you think about $BNB ? Will you hold long-term, or wait for confirmation? #BNB_Market_Update #BTCVSGOLD #USNonFarmPayrollReport
$BTC HUGE Long Liquidation Alert A massive $71.3K position got absolutely wiped out at $89,186.10 on Binance. $BTC dipped hard from the high 90s, sweeping through leveraged longs like a freight train. Right now hovering around $89K, the question is: Capitulation bottom or just the beginning of more pain? Bears reloading for sub-88K? Or bulls about to revenge pump back above 90K+? Volatility is off the charts liquidations pouring in, fear and greed swinging wildly. Who's getting rekt next? Drop your thoughts below! 👇 #BTC #TrumpTariffsOnEurope #GoldSilverAtRecordHighs #CPIWatch #WriteToEarnUpgrade @BTC
Strategy has bought nearly $2.13B worth of Bitcoin. Spot ETFs have bought $1.55B. Nearly 30,000 BTC have exited exchanges. Still, why is Bitcoin dumping so hard? So the question is simple—who is selling? The truth is it's not long-term holders. It's not institutions. It's over-leveraged traders, who are getting wiped out one after another. In just the last 24 hours, $1.07 Billion in leverage positions have been liquidated. This is how the entire game works👇 Price drops a bit → leverage breaks Forced selling begins This forced selling pushes the price down further. More liquidations are triggered. A domino effect is created. For this reason, no matter how much ETFs or Strategy buy in the short term, the market does not react immediately. Oct 10, 2025 was an absolutely devastating day for the market. Liquidity dries up in a single night— $19B liquidated In a month, Bitcoin is down −29% $1 Trillion vanished from total market cap 1.50 Million traders wiped out This was not a failure of Bitcoin. It was a failure of market structure. Too much leverage and illiquid collateral—these two have broken the market. In my opinion, Bitcoin has not failed—it has leveraged. Crypto will recover only when liquidity returns to the market. Until then, expect— pain, noise, and big shakeouts @ISN⁹¹
For the past 2 weeks, BTC has been somewhat up. But looking at the monthly chart makes the situation clearer— there is still no proper weekly shadow below. (The remaining part will be understood by those who know charts.)
Now the biggest tension is— if BTC drops to 80K just to take the liquidity below, what will happen to the ALTCOINS? 🤐🤐🤐