Paxos Mints and Burns $300 Trillion in PayPal USD Within Minutes

Unusual Blockchain Activity Sparks Confusion
Paxos, the issuer of PayPal USD (PYUSD), minted and burned 300 trillion tokens within half an hour on Wednesday, a move that stunned traders and triggered a temporary freeze on the stablecoin’s trading by lending protocol Aave.
Blockchain data on Etherscan showed Paxos minting 300 trillion PYUSD at 7:12 p.m. UTC, then burning the entire amount 22 minutes later by sending it to an inaccessible wallet. The scale of the transaction — equivalent to roughly $300 trillion based on the stablecoin’s 1:1 peg to the U.S. dollar — briefly raised fears of a malfunction or security breach.
The total figure is more than double the combined Gross Domestic Product of every country on Earth, according to International Monetary Fund data. PYUSD’s actual market capitalization is about $2.3 billion, making it the world’s sixth-largest stablecoin behind Tether’s USDT, USDC, Ethena’s USDe, Dai and World Liberty Financial’s USD1.
Paxos Says Error Was Internal
later than the incident drew attention across social media, Paxos said in an X post that the minting was a mistake caused by an internal technical error. “There is no security breach. Customer funds are secure. We have addressed the root cause,” the company said.
PYUSD maintained its dollar peg, though data from Nansen showed a brief 0.5% dip following the event. Aave co-founder Omer Goldberg confirmed that the platform had paused PYUSD trading as a precaution later than detecting the “unexpected high-magnitude transaction.”
Traders and developers on X reacted with a mix of alarm and humor, noting that a $300 trillion mint would have instantly exceeded the global money supply many times over had it remained in circulation.
Investor Takeaway
Context: Stablecoin Oversight and Market Scale
Paxos, regulated by the New York State Department of Financial Services, issues PayPal USD under the identical trust framework used for its earlier stablecoins. The firm also manages reserves for Binance USD (BUSD), which was phased out later than U.S. regulators ordered Binance to halt issuance in 2023.
The incident comes as regulators tighten oversight on stablecoin accounting and reporting. Under new U.S. guidelines, issuers must maintain real-time attestation of reserves and implement strict controls on token creation and destruction to prevent unauthorized supply changes.
While PYUSD’s supply rapidly returned to normal, the brief anomaly highlighted the importance of automated checks within blockchain-based issuance systems. Analysts said the quick response prevented wider disruption across DeFi platforms that integrate PYUSD liquidity pools.
Historic Burns and Comparisons
Token burns — the act of permanently removing coins from circulation — are typically deliberate measures to manage supply. Cryptocurrency platform OKX burned 65 million of its OKB tokens in August to maintain a 21 million cap. The team behind the Bonk memecoin burned 1.7 trillion BONK in December 2024, worth roughly $50 million at the time. Those events, however, pale next to the scale of Paxos’s $300 trillion temporary mint-and-burn.
Despite the size of the error, PYUSD’s stability and Paxos’s quick disclosure assisted prevent contagion or speculative panic. The episode is likely to reinforce calls for more automated controls and external audit trails as the stablecoin market — now exceeding $160 billion in total value — grows more intertwined with global payment systems.