Marketdash

Dogecoin and Shiba Inu Drop 5% as Institutional Selling Overwhelms Token Burns

MarketDash Editorial Team
4 hours ago
Despite Shiba Inu burning millions of tokens and Dogecoin seeing massive exchange outflows, both meme coins crashed 5% as technical indicators point to more downside ahead.

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Dogecoin (DOGE) and Shiba Inu (SHIB) both tumbled roughly 5%, and the reasons why tell you everything about what actually moves crypto prices. Spoiler: it's not token burns or clever supply mechanics.

Dogecoin's $18.77 million exchange outflow is the largest in months, while Shiba Inu's 72% burn rate spike removed millions of tokens from circulation. Neither helped. The price action suggests that when institutions want out, retail enthusiasm and deflationary tokenomics become footnotes.

Why Dogecoin's Massive Outflow Is Actually Bearish

Here's the thing about Dogecoin's record $18.77 million withdrawal yesterday: it happened while the price was trying to rally. That timing matters.

When large amounts of money leave exchanges during a price increase, it typically means bigger players are exiting their positions and selling to smaller buyers who are piling in late. The retail buying pressure simply isn't strong enough to absorb the institutional selling. It's like trying to fill a bathtub while someone's pulling the drain plug.

The technical picture reinforces this bearish narrative. DOGE has plummeted 48% from September's $0.27 peak and now trades below every major exponential moving average. The 20-day EMA sits at $0.13968, the 50-day at $0.14315, the 100-day at $0.15861, and the 200-day way up at $0.17829.

That December bounce from $0.1215 to $0.158 looked promising for about five minutes. Now it's already given back half those gains.

Perhaps most concerning, the $0.12-0.13 support zone has been tested three times since December. Chart watchers will tell you the fourth test usually breaks support, and Dogecoin appears headed there now.

Shiba Inu Burns Millions of Tokens While Price Ignores the Math

Shiba Inu's burn rate jumped 72.33% over the last 24 hours, removing 3.04 million tokens from circulation. The project has burned over 410 trillion tokens from the original supply. These are genuinely impressive numbers.

The price doesn't care.

Token burns reduce the number of coins available, which sounds great in theory. But they don't create buying demand by themselves. You can make something scarcer all day long, but if nobody wants to buy it at current prices, scarcity just means fewer tokens participating in the decline.

SHIB has dropped 53% from August's $0.00001785 peak. Like Dogecoin, it trades below all its moving averages, with the 200-day at $0.00001046 sitting far above the current price. The Supertrend indicator at $0.00000754 represents the last major support level before the chart structure breaks down completely.

The Technical Levels That Actually Matter Right Now

Dogecoin

  • Next support: $0.13968 (20-day moving average)
  • Critical level: $0.12 (already tested three times)
  • If that breaks: $0.10-0.11 zone, then potentially $0.08-0.09
  • Resistance above: $0.14315 (50-day), then $0.15-0.158

Shiba Inu

  • Next support: $0.00000794 (yesterday's low)
  • Critical level: $0.00000754 (Supertrend indicator)
  • If that breaks: $0.000007, then December's low at $0.00000676, potentially down to $0.000005-0.000006
  • Resistance above: $0.0000085-0.000009

The lesson here is straightforward: supply-side gimmicks and exchange flow metrics make for interesting headlines, but they don't override basic market dynamics. When selling pressure exceeds buying demand, prices fall regardless of how many tokens you burn or how the money moves between wallets. Both meme coins now face critical technical tests that will determine whether this is just another dip or the beginning of a much deeper correction.

Dogecoin and Shiba Inu Drop 5% as Institutional Selling Overwhelms Token Burns

MarketDash Editorial Team
4 hours ago
Despite Shiba Inu burning millions of tokens and Dogecoin seeing massive exchange outflows, both meme coins crashed 5% as technical indicators point to more downside ahead.

Get Market Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS alerts

Dogecoin (DOGE) and Shiba Inu (SHIB) both tumbled roughly 5%, and the reasons why tell you everything about what actually moves crypto prices. Spoiler: it's not token burns or clever supply mechanics.

Dogecoin's $18.77 million exchange outflow is the largest in months, while Shiba Inu's 72% burn rate spike removed millions of tokens from circulation. Neither helped. The price action suggests that when institutions want out, retail enthusiasm and deflationary tokenomics become footnotes.

Why Dogecoin's Massive Outflow Is Actually Bearish

Here's the thing about Dogecoin's record $18.77 million withdrawal yesterday: it happened while the price was trying to rally. That timing matters.

When large amounts of money leave exchanges during a price increase, it typically means bigger players are exiting their positions and selling to smaller buyers who are piling in late. The retail buying pressure simply isn't strong enough to absorb the institutional selling. It's like trying to fill a bathtub while someone's pulling the drain plug.

The technical picture reinforces this bearish narrative. DOGE has plummeted 48% from September's $0.27 peak and now trades below every major exponential moving average. The 20-day EMA sits at $0.13968, the 50-day at $0.14315, the 100-day at $0.15861, and the 200-day way up at $0.17829.

That December bounce from $0.1215 to $0.158 looked promising for about five minutes. Now it's already given back half those gains.

Perhaps most concerning, the $0.12-0.13 support zone has been tested three times since December. Chart watchers will tell you the fourth test usually breaks support, and Dogecoin appears headed there now.

Shiba Inu Burns Millions of Tokens While Price Ignores the Math

Shiba Inu's burn rate jumped 72.33% over the last 24 hours, removing 3.04 million tokens from circulation. The project has burned over 410 trillion tokens from the original supply. These are genuinely impressive numbers.

The price doesn't care.

Token burns reduce the number of coins available, which sounds great in theory. But they don't create buying demand by themselves. You can make something scarcer all day long, but if nobody wants to buy it at current prices, scarcity just means fewer tokens participating in the decline.

SHIB has dropped 53% from August's $0.00001785 peak. Like Dogecoin, it trades below all its moving averages, with the 200-day at $0.00001046 sitting far above the current price. The Supertrend indicator at $0.00000754 represents the last major support level before the chart structure breaks down completely.

The Technical Levels That Actually Matter Right Now

Dogecoin

  • Next support: $0.13968 (20-day moving average)
  • Critical level: $0.12 (already tested three times)
  • If that breaks: $0.10-0.11 zone, then potentially $0.08-0.09
  • Resistance above: $0.14315 (50-day), then $0.15-0.158

Shiba Inu

  • Next support: $0.00000794 (yesterday's low)
  • Critical level: $0.00000754 (Supertrend indicator)
  • If that breaks: $0.000007, then December's low at $0.00000676, potentially down to $0.000005-0.000006
  • Resistance above: $0.0000085-0.000009

The lesson here is straightforward: supply-side gimmicks and exchange flow metrics make for interesting headlines, but they don't override basic market dynamics. When selling pressure exceeds buying demand, prices fall regardless of how many tokens you burn or how the money moves between wallets. Both meme coins now face critical technical tests that will determine whether this is just another dip or the beginning of a much deeper correction.