EverValue launches Burn Vault Boost to concentrate BTC backing on a token subset

EverValue (EVA) announced the launch of Burn Vault Boost on February 6, 2026 — an upgrade to its on-chain BTC backing and burn framework. The Boost adds a separate smart-contract vault that applies wrapped-Bitcoin (wBTC) backing to a predefined subset of the fixed EVA token supply, while the original Burn Vault Core continues to back the full circulating supply. By concentrating backing on fewer eligible tokens, the Boost increases the sensitivity of the protocol’s BTC-denominated reference burn value for that subset when BTC deposits occur. The mechanism is fully on-chain, publicly verifiable (backing levels, eligible token counts and reference burn values), requires no action from token holders beyond possession, and does not directly alter market exchange prices. EverValue says burns executed through the Boost still reduce total supply. The Boost underwent a CertiK security audit. EverValue integrates Bitcoin mining-generated BTC reserves into its backing model; more details are at boost.evervaluecoin.com. Media contact: Flor Ayala, CEO (marketing@evervaluecoin.com).
Neutral
The Burn Vault Boost is a technical, protocol-level change that modifies how BTC backing is allocated across EverValue’s fixed token supply without altering market listings or introducing new tradable assets. For traders, immediate price impact is likely limited because the mechanism does not change exchange pricing or require holder action. Concentrating backing on a subset could increase the on-chain reference burn value for that subset when BTC flows in, potentially supporting longer-term token scarcity narratives if deposits and burns are sustained. The CertiK audit reduces some security concerns, which is neutral-to-slightly-positive for confidence. Comparable events — like projects adding on-chain collateral layers or staged reserve mechanisms — typically produce limited short-term price moves unless paired with significant BTC inflows, major liquidity events, or broader market catalysts. Therefore the expected market effect is neutral in the short term; over the medium to long term, persistent BTC reserve growth and repeated burns could be modestly bullish by tightening effective backing per eligible token, but that outcome depends on operational BTC deposit cadence and market adoption.