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The Tether burn discussion is getting misunderstood badly.
A lot of people see “2B USDT burned” and instantly think liquidity disappeared from crypto.
That’s not automatically true.
Tether burns usually happen when institutions or large entities redeem USDT back for dollars. It’s more about supply adjustment than random destruction of market value.
The important part is why the redemption is happening.
If burns accelerate during market weakness, that can signal capital leaving crypto risk exposure. But isolated burns alone don’t tell the full story because Tether regularly expands and contracts supply based on redemption flow.
What I’m watching is whether burns start happening alongside weaker stablecoin inflows overall.
That combination matters more.
Stablecoins are basically the bloodstream of crypto liquidity now. When supply growth slows aggressively, speculative momentum usually weakens after it.
But there’s another side most people ignore.
Large burns can also mean the system is functioning correctly.
Redemptions being processed at scale actually reinforce confidence that stablecoins can handle exits without immediate collapse pressure. In traditional finance terms, redemption capacity is part of trust.
The real danger is not burning.
The real danger is when redemption confidence disappears.
Right now I don’t think this changes the macro crypto structure yet. But it’s definitely one of those metrics worth tracking quietly in the background while everyone else watches price candles.
Liquidity shifts usually appear in stablecoin behavior first.
Charts notice later.
$BTC $USDT $TON
#TetherBurns2BUSDT
#NFPBeatsAgainCutsFade
#OKXPreIPOPerpsGoLive

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