- Record SHIB burns failed to offset heavy whale selling and continued price weakness.
- More than 585 trillion circulating tokens limit the long-term impact of burn campaigns.
- Weak demand, not supply, remains the biggest obstacle to SHIB’s recovery.
Shiba Inu supporters hoped a massive token burn would spark fresh buying pressure. Instead, the market delivered another disappointing result. More than 110 million SHIB disappeared from circulation in one day. However, sellers quickly overwhelmed any positive sentiment. Price weakness continues despite strong community efforts. That contrast highlights a bigger challenge facing SHIB today. Supply reduction alone cannot drive lasting gains without stronger demand from traders and long-term investors.
Massive Burn Fails to Reverse Selling Pressure
The Shiba Inu community completed one of the largest burn events seen this year on July 8, 2026. More than 110 million SHIB moved into dead wallets forever. Robinhood played the biggest role after a wallet linked to the platform burned roughly 109 million tokens. Smaller holders also joined the campaign and added millions more to the total. Many investors expected the burn to support higher prices.
Previous burn events often encouraged stronger market sentiment. This time, the reaction looked very different. SHIB dropped around 5% during the day. Monthly losses also reached roughly 9%. Price action remained trapped inside a narrow trading range with little sign of renewed momentum. Burn activity continued to increase beyond a single day. Weekly burns climbed above 152 million tokens.
These weekly burns represented a rise of almost 56% from the previous period. Even so, experienced traders remained cautious. Large investors continued moving enormous amounts of SHIB onto exchanges. More than one trillion tokens entered trading platforms, adding fresh selling pressure. Those transfers erased much of the positive impact created by community burns.
Supply Is Only Part of the Story
The latest burn looks impressive at first glance. However, the broader supply picture tells a different story. Since launch, the community has destroyed more than 410 trillion SHIB. Even after those efforts, roughly 585.6 trillion tokens still remain in circulation. That enormous supply limits the effect of smaller burn campaigns. History also provides important context. During 2021, Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin received half of the original SHIB supply. He later burned more than 410 trillion tokens in one transaction.
That single event still accounts for almost every token ever removed from circulation. Compared with that historic burn, current community efforts barely reduce the total supply. Market sentiment also continues weakening across the memecoin sector. Some well-known traders now question SHIB’s long-term outlook. James Wynn recently described the token as “dead.” Meanwhile, whales continue reducing exposure instead of accumulating larger positions. Those actions suggest confidence remains fragile.
The biggest obstacle no longer comes from supply. Demand has become the real concern. Burn campaigns can reduce available tokens over time. However, stronger buying interest must return before prices can recover meaningfully. Until demand improves, even record burn activity may struggle to change SHIB’s direction.
