Shiba Inu (SHIB), one of the most talked-about cryptocurrencies, has seen a staggering decline of 60% in value this year, dashing hopes for a significant price surge to levels like $1 or even $0.01. Such aspirations would necessitate a market capitalization that is nearly incomprehensible—$589 trillion—six times greater than the total Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the entire planet.
A key factor behind this bleak outlook is the sheer supply of tokens in circulation. Shiba Inu boasts an astounding 589 trillion tokens, in stark contrast to Bitcoin’s limited supply of just 21 million and Ethereum’s approximately 120 million tokens. For SHIB to reach the ambitious price of $1, its market cap would soar to $589 trillion, surpassing the market value of Nvidia, which currently stands at $4.4 trillion, by more than 130 times. Moreover, it would hold a market valuation ten times larger than the combined total of all 500 companies in the S&P 500, which collectively are valued at around $57 trillion. Achieving a more achievable price of $0.01 would still require a market cap of $5.89 trillion, nearly double the total valuation of all cryptocurrencies combined.
The Shiba Inu team’s endeavor to invigorate the ecosystem relied heavily on Shibarium, a Layer-2 blockchain introduced in August 2023. The platform aimed to fuel a deflationary economy through automated token burns funded by transaction fees. Initially, the project showed promise, with transaction volumes reaching up to 4 million daily. However, this enthusiasm has since evaporated, with current transaction counts now hovering at just a few thousand per day. Furthermore, Total Value Locked (TVL) on Shibarium struggles to surpass $1 million, a figure that pales in comparison to its competitors in the Layer-2 landscape.
In addition to Shibarium’s disappointing performance, other projects within the Shiba Inu ecosystem have either stalled or failed to launch effectively. The anticipated privacy Layer-3 blockchain announced in April 2024 has received scant updates since its unveiling. The long-anticipated metaverse project has yet to successfully launch after years of development, and Shiba Eternity, the gaming application, has only captured a niche audience.
The narrative of Shiba Inu as a deflationary asset has also faced significant turmoil this year. Weekly burn activities have plummeted by an alarming 96.96%, and as of late December, the ecosystem reported no token burns within a 24-hour period, effectively stalling its deflationary strategy. At the current burn rate, estimates show it would take an astronomical 521,415 years to remove enough tokens to realistically justify a price point of $1. Presently, monthly burn rates fluctuate between 13 million and 2.31 billion SHIB tokens, a pace considered glacial, rendering any significant supply reduction a multi-century endeavor.
Unlike Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP, which have established organic sources of demand—serving as a store of value, a computational platform, and a payment bridge respectively—Shiba Inu lacks such foundations. According to the crypto directory Cryptwerk, only around 1,110 businesses globally accept SHIB as a payment method. This limited acceptance combined with extreme volatility undermines its viability as a payment mechanism, raising the risk of substantial losses for consumers and businesses holding the token. Moreover, SHIB has not reached a new high in over four years, signaling its unreliability as a store of value.
As the landscape for Shiba Inu continues to shift, questions linger about the future of the token and its ecosystem amid waning demand and ongoing challenges.
