Shiba Inu (SHIB) is down 60% in 2025, and the community's long-standing dream of reaching $1—or even $0.01—has run headfirst into the cold reality of basic arithmetic. With 589 trillion tokens floating around, the numbers simply don't work. They never did.
The Supply Problem Nobody Wanted to Talk About
Here's the thing about Shiba Inu: it has 589 trillion tokens in circulation. For perspective, Bitcoin (BTC) has 21 million and Ethereum (ETH) has about 120 million. The gap isn't just large—it's incomprehensible.
If SHIB somehow hit $1, its market cap would reach $589 trillion. That's more than 130 times the value of Nvidia, which sits at $4.4 trillion. It's 10 times larger than all 500 companies in the S&P 500 combined, which together are worth $57 trillion. It's six times the entire planet's GDP.
Even reaching a more "modest" $0.01 would require a $5.89 trillion market cap—almost twice the size of the entire cryptocurrency market combined. These aren't ambitious targets. They're fantasy.
The Ecosystem That Fizzled Out
The Shiba Inu team wasn't just sitting around hoping for magic. They launched Shibarium in August 2023, a Layer-2 blockchain designed to create automated token burns through transaction fees. The pitch sounded reasonable: as more people used Shibarium apps, transaction fees would get converted to SHIB and burned, creating a deflationary engine that would reduce supply over time.
Except nobody showed up. Shibarium once processed up to 4 million daily transactions in its early days. Now it handles only a few thousand. The Total Value Locked on the network struggles to stay above $1 million—embarrassing compared to other Layer-2 options.
Beyond Shibarium, the rest of the ecosystem looks equally bleak. The privacy Layer-3 blockchain announced in April 2024 has gone mostly silent. The metaverse project never fully launched despite years of development. The Shiba Eternity gaming initiative attracted only a niche audience. Nothing gained meaningful traction.
Burns That Barely Register
Token burns were supposed to be Shiba Inu's salvation. Burn enough tokens, reduce the supply, and the price should rise—basic economics, right? But in 2025, the burn mechanism essentially collapsed.
Weekly burn activity dropped 96.96%. In late December, the ecosystem reported zero token burns in a 24-hour period. The deflationary strategy came to a complete halt.
At the current pace, it would take 521,415 years to eliminate enough tokens to justify a $1 price. Monthly burn rates bounce between 13 million and 2.31 billion SHIB—sounds like a lot until you remember there are 589 trillion tokens. At this glacial pace, meaningful supply reduction is a multi-century project, not an investment strategy.
No Real Use Case to Drive Demand
Bitcoin is a store of value. Ethereum is a computing platform. XRP (XRP) serves as a payments bridge. What's Shiba Inu?
According to crypto directory Cryptwerk, just 1,110 businesses worldwide accept SHIB as payment. Its extreme volatility makes it terrible as a payment mechanism—nobody wants to hold a token that might drop 60% in a few months. And SHIB hasn't made a new high in more than four years, so it's clearly not a reliable store of value either.
Without organic demand—without a reason for people to actually want and use the token—price appreciation relies entirely on speculation and hype. And as 2025 has shown, that hype can evaporate quickly when the math catches up with the narrative.




