$OKB, the native token of the crypto exchange OKX, plunged 170 percent in the wake of a significant supply burn step completed by the company. OKX said it will burn 65.26 million $OKB in a one-time market buyback to permanently hard cap the total supply of the token at 21 million.
BREAKING: $OKB, the native token of @okx, surged 170% to $124.
— Satoshi Club (@esatoshiclub) August 13, 2025
This comes after OKX announced a one-time burn of ~65.26M $OKB from past buybacks, fixing total supply at 21M.
The burn removes all company reserve tokens from circulation. pic.twitter.com/NHKfd0aIjq
This burn will eliminate all remaining tokens held in the company reserve, and it can probably be attributed to the need to increase scarcity and long-term value.
After the spike, $OKB is hot and is now traded at approximately $107 after reaching $124.
Record $OKB Supply Cut Triggers Market Pump
A token burn is a method of instituting deflationary pressure. By removing the reserve supply, OKX has essentially locked the circulating supply in the future, providing the investors with a greater understanding of the tokenomics.
The announcement triggered a buying rush to drive $OKB to new heights and attract massive interest among retail and institutional investors.
Analysts say that when there is such a big surge, especially in one day, it usually leads to additional volatility and the need to take profits.
Technical Indicators Show Overbought Conditions
The daily Relative Strength Index (RSI) for $OKB has shot up to 95, which is far into overbought territory, even if the mood is still optimistic. This means that the coin might have a short-term decline as traders extract profits.
Nevertheless, the market largely considers the drop in supply a long-term value-positive move, which further indicates the role of $OKB in the OKX ecosystem and even makes it more popular as a deflationary asset.
The upcoming sessions will be crucial in determining whether the price consolidates above the $100 level or pulls back further before establishing new support areas.