$PEPE #noInflation

"Coin Inflation" in the traditional sense does not apply for $PEPE .

Inflation of a Currency means the decrease in the purchasing power of that currency over time.

In simple words: Prices rise, and each unit of money buys fewer goods and services.

For example:

If inflation is 5% per year, something that costs $100 today will cost $105 next year.

In the context of PEPE or cryptocurrencies, "inflation" usually refers to:

New coins being added to circulation (increasing total supply), or

Reduced value of each coin if demand doesn’t grow faster than supply.

However, PEPE is a meme coin, and it was launched with a fixed total supply of 420 trillion coins.

This means there is no ongoing minting (printing) of new PEPE coins — so "coin inflation" in the traditional sense does not apply here.

But!

Economic inflation (US Dollar inflation, for example) still affects PEPE indirectly because:

If USDT or USD loses value over time, it can make crypto prices seem higher.

However, cryptos are highly speculative and influenced more by hype, adoption, and news, not normal inflation rates.

Summary for PEPE:

No active inflation from within PEPE (supply is fixed).

External inflation (like USD inflation) may affect how much people value cryptocurrencies generally.

Biggest factors for PEPE's price are hype, social media trends, market liquidity, and broader crypto market health.