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2) The amount of BNB burned each quarter is: (1000 * number of BSC blocks) / (BNB price + 1000) There are about 2.5m BSC blocks per quarter, and this doesn't really depend on anything, so the formula is really: # BNB tokens = 2.5b / (price + 1000) What does that mean?
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3) Well, this is quarterly, so annually it's: 10b / (price + 1000) There are about 170m BNB tokens. Also, the burning stops when there are 100m tokens left.
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4) So, in the limit where BNB price is small, 10m tokens are burned each year for the next 7 years, and then the burning stops. (Note it isn't clear there's *buying* -- the burn may come from treasury/etc.) Which doesn't really have much to do with Binance, or BSC.
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5) In the limit where BNB price is >> 1000, $10b worth are burned each year, until there are 100m tokens left. Again, this limit doesn't really have to do much with Binance, or BSC.
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6) And the thing that determines which of these limits it's closer to is... the price of BNB. If you ignored the 100m cap, then BNB would start burning 10m tokens/year, and ultimately--if the token supply starting running out or price went up otherwise--end up burning $10b/year.
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8) So if BNB's price goes up, then it's worth $200b except for the 100m cap; if BNB's price goes down, then it reduces to 100m supply over ~7-10 years. Which is... interesting? It's a cool mechanism. But it's not clear it's related at all to Binance.
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