$B2B Tokenomics

This is the short version of the token.

The basics

  • Symbol. $B2B
  • Chain. Base
  • Standard. ERC20 with Permit (EIP 2612).
  • Decimals. 18.
  • Total supply. 1,000,000,000. Fixed. The contract has no mint function.

The entire supply is minted to the deployer at deploy time. From there it is moved into the liquidity pool and the team wallet.

Where every token goes

We launch with two buckets only.

  • Liquidity pool. 950,000,000 tokens. That is 95% of the supply. Paired with ETH on Uniswap V2 (Base). The LP tokens are locked.
  • Team wallet. 50,000,000 tokens. That is 5% of the supply. Held by the founder wallet for exchange listings, partnerships, and operating costs.

There is no private sale, no public sale, no airdrop, and no farm at launch.

Taxes

There are none. The contract has zero tax logic in it. You pay zero on a buy. You pay zero on a sell. You pay zero on a wallet to wallet transfer. The buyer always receives 100% of the amount swapped. There is no tax wallet. There is no fee mechanism that can be added later either, because the contract is immutable once deployed.

Anti sniper limits

For the first hour of trading the contract enforces two caps that grow on their own. You do not need to call anything to relax them. They relax themselves every block.

  • Max wallet. Starts at 20,000,000 tokens (2% of supply) the second trading is enabled. Grows by 0.03% of supply per second.
  • Max transaction. Starts at 10,000,000 tokens (1% of supply) the second trading is enabled. Grows by 0.03% of supply per second.

In plain math:

  • 0.03% of one billion is 300,000 tokens. Every second after trading begins, 300,000 tokens get added to the cap.
  • After 100 seconds the max wallet cap is 5% of supply. The max transaction cap is 4% of supply.
  • After 1,000 seconds the max wallet cap is 32% of supply. The max transaction cap is 31% of supply.
  • After 3,267 seconds (about 54 minutes 27 seconds) the max wallet cap hits 100% of supply.
  • After 3,300 seconds (55 minutes flat) the max transaction cap hits 100% of supply.

Once a cap reaches 100% of supply it has no effect. The token behaves like a plain ERC20.

The owner can call removeLimits() to short circuit the ramp if the chart looks healthy before 55 minutes. That is a one way switch. After removal the limits cannot come back.

What the owner cannot do

The contract is intentionally small. The owner has no power to do any of the following.

  • Mint new tokens. There is no mint function.
  • Blacklist a wallet. There is no blacklist function.
  • Add a tax. There is no tax code path.
  • Freeze trading after launch. The trading switch is one way.
  • Change the growth rate, the start values, or the timer. They are hard coded constants.

The only things the owner can do are: enable trading once, flag the LP pair, exclude an address from the limits (used for CEXes, market makers, and the team wallet), remove the limits early as a one way switch, transfer ownership, or renounce ownership.

Renouncing

The contract inherits OpenZeppelin's Ownable2Step, which gives you a standard renounceOwnership() function. Calling it sets the owner to the zero address. After that, nobody can ever call any owner only function on the contract. The dynamic limits keep working on their own.

Recommended order: enable trading, add liquidity, lock LP, then renounce. The renounce call costs about 30,000 gas.

Fee flow

There is no fee flow. The buyer gets 100% of the buy. The seller gets 100% of the sell.

Buyer ─► LP pair ─► Buyer wallet  (100% of size)
Seller wallet ─► LP pair ─► Seller (100% of size, in ETH)

That is the whole system.

Why no vesting contract

At 5% of supply the team holding is small enough that a vesting contract adds complexity without protecting anyone. The token is also live in a public LP from the first block. Anyone can watch the team wallet in real time. If the team dumps, the chart says so before anything else does.

Disclaimers

$B2B is a utility token. It is not a security. Holding it gives you no claim on revenue, equity, or assets. The supply is fixed. The contract is open source. You should read the contract before you buy.