TL;DR
- SIREN reportedly fell more than 95% after a whale sold roughly 670 million tokens.
- Lookonchain tracked about $64.8 million USDT in proceeds from the selloff.
- The address reportedly controlled more than 90% of circulating supply before the liquidation.
- The story is a warning about meme coin liquidity and supply concentration, not a verdict on AI infrastructure.
SIREN has delivered one of the harsher reminders of what can happen when a token’s supply is heavily concentrated in one place. According to the June 16 writing handoff, the BNB Chain-based AI-agent meme token fell by more than 95% between June 13 and June 15 after a single whale liquidated roughly 670 million tokens.
On-chain analytics firm Lookonchain reportedly tracked around $64.8 million USDT in proceeds from the selling. The handoff says the whale controlled between 92% and 94% of SIREN’s circulating supply before the liquidation, leaving the market with little chance of absorbing the sell pressure smoothly.
Supply Concentration Turns Into Market Structure Risk
A token can look liquid when prices are rising, especially if there is active trading and social momentum. The problem shows up when a large holder tries to exit. If one wallet controls the overwhelming majority of circulating supply, the visible market cap can become almost meaningless because there may not be enough real depth to support that valuation.
That appears to be the core lesson from SIREN. The token reportedly dropped from around $1.30 to near $0.05 in roughly 48 hours. Lookonchain also tracked $25.7 million USDT moving to centralized exchanges, including Binance, Gate, and KuCoin, while another $39.1 million USDT was split across hundreds of smaller on-chain addresses.
Not An AI Failure, But A Token Design Warning
The caveat is important. SIREN may have used an AI-agent narrative, but this should not be read as a collapse of serious AI crypto infrastructure. It is better understood as a low-liquidity meme coin event where supply concentration, shallow pools, and sudden whale selling collided.
For traders, the story is useful because it cuts through a common bull-market illusion. A token can trend, post a large paper valuation, and still be structurally fragile if ownership is too centralized. Before chasing a narrative, market participants need to look at holder distribution, liquidity depth, and whether a single wallet can effectively decide the chart.
SIREN’s collapse shows how quickly that risk can move from theoretical to devastating.
A Simple Due Diligence Lesson
Before entering smaller tokens, traders should look past the headline narrative and check whether liquidity can actually support the market cap. Holder concentration, pool depth, exchange listings, unlocks, and large wallet behavior often matter more than branding. In SIREN’s case, the reported concentration was so extreme that a single seller could dominate price discovery. That is exactly the kind of structure that can turn a speculative trade into an unrecoverable drawdown within hours.
That makes the story useful as an evening draft because it gives readers a clear market takeaway rather than a simple headline rewrite. The important point is not only what happened, but what traders should monitor next: confirmation from primary sources, whether the initial reaction holds, and whether the development creates lasting liquidity, regulatory, or risk-management implications.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
This article is based on information from the sources linked above. at Lookonchain

