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COIN
no-coiners price

EN9CHD...pump
$0.000059641
-$0.00006
(-49.10%)
Price change for the last 24 hours

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COIN market info
Market cap
Market cap is calculated by multiplying the circulating supply of a coin with its latest price.
Market cap = Circulating supply × Last price
Market cap = Circulating supply × Last price
Network
Underlying blockchain that supports secure, decentralized transactions.
Circulating supply
Total amount of a coin that is publicly available on the market.
Liquidity
Liquidity is the ease of buying/selling a coin on DEX. The higher the liquidity, the easier it is to complete a transaction.
Market cap
$59,640.92
Network
Solana
Circulating supply
1,000,000,000 COIN
Token holders
147
Liquidity
$11.78
1h volume
$3.20M
4h volume
$4.46M
24h volume
$4.46M
no-coiners Feed
The following content is sourced from .

Odaily
On June 18, the U.S. Senate officially passed the GENIUS Act, marking the first time that the U.S. government has recognized the compliance legitimacy of crypto assets in the form of legislation, breaking the policy vacuum caused by the ambiguity of the regulatory powers of the SEC and the CFTC.
Against this backdrop of favorable regulation, JPMorgan Chase and Coinbase released major developments on the same day, focusing on on-chain banking and tokenized securities, respectively, showing that traditional finance and crypto ecosystems are deeply integrated.
JPMorgan Chase deposits can now be placed on Base
JPMorgan Chase, which is the earliest and most active in the deployment of blockchain among traditional financial institutions, announced the launch of a pilot project called JPMD (JPMorgan Deposit Token). JPMD is an on-chain token that represents a customer's USD bank deposit, based on a partial reserve mechanism, and will be deployed on the Coinbase-backed public chain, Base.
Naveen Mallela, co-head of Kinexys, the blockchain arm of JPMorgan Chase, said the bank will complete its first JPMD transfer in the coming days, transferring funds from its digital wallet to the Coinbase platform, paving the way for subsequent institutional customers to use the token for on-chain transactions.
The pilot, which is expected to last several months, signals that JPMorgan Chase is further exploring efficient and secure institutional-grade trading tools through on-chain deposit tokens. The day before, the bank had applied for the "JPMD" trademark, which covers digital asset payment, transfer and transaction services, indicating its intention to use the tool for a long time.
J.P. Morgan's choice to pilot the issuance of JPMD on Base not only shows its recognition of Base's security and transaction efficiency, but also means that institutional customers may directly clear on-chain funds through the Base and Coinbase ecosystems in the future, which will inject core liquidity sources into the "CeDeFi Bridge" built by Coinbase.
Why "Deposit Tokens"?
While the launch of JPMD has sparked speculation about its possible foray into the stablecoin market, however, Naveen Mallela, an executive at JPMorgan Chase's blockchain arm Kinexys, said in an interview with Bloomberg that deposit tokens are a better alternative for institutional users than stablecoins because they are more scalable because they are based on a partial reserve mechanism.
He pointed out that deposit tokens represent actual USD deposits in customer bank accounts and operate in a way that relies on the traditional banking system, while stablecoins are just digital twins of fiat currencies backed by cash and equivalents, and their legal status and operating logic are more free from the traditional financial system.
In parallel with the launch of the JPMD pilot, three key JPMorgan executives have held closed-door talks with the SEC's Crypto Task Force to discuss how capital market instruments can be migrated to public blockchains, the impact that changes may have on market structures, and how institutions should evaluate the risk control and return models that on-chain finance brings.
According to the minutes of the meeting released by the SEC, the exchanges between the two sides covered multiple cutting-edge directions such as digital repurchases, digital debt instruments, and on-chain financing. JPMorgan Chase & Co. also made it clear that it is actively evaluating whether it can form a structural competitive advantage in terms of asset tokenization and on-chain settlement efficiency.
In addition to "Rushing Dogs", you can also buy stocks on Base
Echoing JPMorgan's exploration of an on-chain banking system, Coinbase is also evolving from an exchange platform to an on-chain asset infrastructure provider. The company's chief legal officer, Paul Grewal, revealed that Coinbase is applying for a no-objection letter from the US SEC to launch a tokenized stock trading service to US customers, subject to an exemption or license. Obtaining a No Objection Letter means that SEC staff will not take enforcement action against Coinbase's launch of the tokenized stock service.
If Coinbase is successfully approved for the tokenized stock business, it will realize the integrated closed-loop asset flow of "stablecoin purchase→ on-chain settlement→ stock trading → rebate consumption" within the same platform for the first time. This not only challenges the trading entry status of brokerages such as Robinhood and Schwab, but may also force these platforms to consider introducing stablecoin payment and on-chain settlement logic, forcing the entire securities industry to enter the era of on-chain assets.
Tokenized shares promise faster settlements, longer trading windows, and lower operating costs. But at the moment, U.S. investors don't have access to such products. Coinbase's new plan means that it will not only be the "NASDAQ" of crypto assets, but also become the on-chain entry point for traditional securities trading.
In fact, Coinbase's exploration of tokenized shares isn't the first of its kind. As early as 2021, during the S1 filing stage before the company's listing, there was a plan to tokenize its own stock COIN, but it was ultimately stranded due to lack of SEC approval.
The attempt is the latest move by Coinbase to expand beyond crypto assets, with the aim of opening up new revenue streams and driving further adoption at the institutional level. Just last week, Coinbase launched an American Express-backed credit card and partnered with Shopify and Stripe to promote the USDC stablecoin payment app.
Regulatory uncertainty has been a major obstacle to the widespread adoption of blockchain securities trading. But with the SEC's plans to adopt DeFi as well as stablecoins, it's clear that regulation is no longer a concern for Coinbase at the moment.
At the same time, competition is intensifying. The news of Coinbase's launch of tokenized shares comes on the heels of Kraken's xStocks project, which was announced weeks ago. The latter has started offering on-chain trading services for more than 50 stocks and ETFs in Europe, Latin America, Africa, and Asian markets. Coinbase needs a faster and clearer regulatory path to deal with the new race to become a crypto broker.
It's all about revenue
According to statistics, retail transactions only account for about 18% of Coinbase's trading, and from 2024, the proportion of Coinbase's institutional customers' trading volume will continue to increase (Q1 2024 trading volume is $256 billion, accounting for 82.05% of the total trading volume), and with Coinbase's integration of DEXs on Base, it should be able to introduce a large amount of liquidity for tens of thousands of Base on-chain tokens, and more importantly, a large number of products in the Base ecosystem will be owned Coinbase's potential for real-world compliance.
Related Reading: Coinbase Wants to Be "Binance in the United States"
This month, Coinbase partnered with Shopify to support USDC payments on Base on the e-commerce checkout page, cutting into cross-border stablecoin payments. On the other hand, the DEX on Base will be integrated into the main Coinbase application to open up the flow channel between on-chain assets and CeFi users. The most disruptive move was the announcement of the launch of a 24/7 perpetual contract trading feature in the United States that complies with the CFTC regulatory framework.
Behind these actions, they all point to a core - rebuilding Coinbase's revenue model. As spot trading revenue shrinks year over year, Coinbase's earnings data shows that its trading revenue is overly reliant on the crypto market cycle. Against this backdrop, derivatives have become a more anti-cyclical source of income. By integrating Deribit's liquidity and user base, Coinbase is building a closed loop on derivatives trading for global institutions, and the CFTC endorsement has created a compliance moat in the U.S. market.
At the same time, Coinbase has partnered with Shopify and Stripe to promote the native use of USDC in e-commerce payment scenarios. Shoppers can pay directly with USDC at checkout on their Shopify store, while merchants can choose to settle in stablecoins or their own currency. Combined with the smart contract hosting and API module on Base, this process does not require consumers or merchants to have cryptographic knowledge, forming a highly scalable "compliant crypto payment engine". Stablecoin transactions not only bring on-chain gas fees and clearing fees, but also open up stable revenue channels for Coinbase in long-tail markets such as small businesses and cross-border e-commerce.
The cooperation between Coinbase One Card and American Express uses rebates as a link to bind users through asset lock-up to further activate the trading behavior on the platform. Although these products still need to face a trade-off between cost and yield, it reflects Coinbase's strategic vision of gradually integrating "financial services + consumption scenarios".
This rhythm of multi-point attacks is not accidental. In the window period when regulatory benefits are beginning to emerge and the on-chain settlement infrastructure is gradually complete, Coinbase has chosen to use its platform as a hub to build a multi-dimensional revenue network with compliance as the core and diversified asset flows as the characteristic, from DEX and stablecoin payments to derivatives trading. Behind this logic is the key inflection point in Coinbase's transformation from a crypto exchange to an on-chain financial operating system.
Whether it is JPMorgan Chase's JPMD based on bank deposits, or the layout of Coinbase's tokenized securities platform, they all point to the same trend - on-chain finance is entering a period of institutional restructuring driven by regulation, infrastructure and mainstream financial institutions.
The passage of the GENIUS Act, the heated discussion of stablecoins, and the continued experimentation of major institutions on on-chain market infrastructure mean that crypto finance is no longer a marginal experiment, but a realistic choice to gradually embed itself in the structure of global financial markets, and the boundaries between on-chain and off-chain are being broken layer by layer by these first movers.
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Blockbeats
On June 18, the U.S. Senate officially passed the GENIUS Act, marking the first time that the U.S. government has recognised the compliance legitimacy of crypto assets in the form of legislation, breaking the policy vacuum caused by the ambiguity of the regulatory powers of the SEC and the CFTC.
Against this backdrop of favourable regulation, JPMorgan Chase and Coinbase released major developments on the same day, focusing on on-chain banking and tokenised securities, respectively, showing that traditional finance and crypto ecosystems are deeply integrated.
JPMorgan Chase deposits can now be placed on Base
JPMorgan Chase, which is the earliest and most active in the deployment of blockchain among traditional financial institutions, announced the launch of a pilot project called JPMD (JPMorgan Deposit Token). JPMD is an on-chain token that represents a customer's USD bank deposit, based on a partial reserve mechanism, and will be deployed on the Coinbase-backed public chain, Base.
Naveen Mallela, co-head of Kinexys, the blockchain arm of JPMorgan Chase, said the bank will complete its first JPMD transfer in the coming days, transferring funds from its digital wallet to the Coinbase platform, paving the way for subsequent institutional customers to use the token for on-chain transactions.
The pilot, which is expected to last several months, signals that JPMorgan Chase is further exploring efficient and secure institutional-grade trading tools through on-chain deposit tokens. The day before, the bank had applied for the "JPMD" trademark, which covers digital asset payment, transfer and transaction services, indicating its intention to use the tool for a long time.
J.P. Morgan's choice to pilot the issuance of JPMD on Base not only shows its recognition of Base's security and transaction efficiency, but also means that institutional customers may directly clear on-chain funds through the Base and Coinbase ecosystems in the future, which will inject core liquidity sources into the "CeDeFi Bridge" built by Coinbase.
Why "Deposit Tokens"?
While the launch of JPMD has sparked speculation about its possible foray into the stablecoin market, however, Naveen Mallela, an executive at JPMorgan Chase's blockchain arm Kinexys, said in an interview with Bloomberg that deposit tokens are a better alternative for institutional users than stablecoins because they are more scalable because they are based on a partial reserve mechanism.
He pointed out that deposit tokens represent actual USD deposits in customer bank accounts and operate in a way that relies on the traditional banking system, while stablecoins are just digital twins of fiat currencies backed by cash and equivalents, and their legal status and operating logic are more free from the traditional financial system.
In parallel with the launch of the JPMD pilot, three key JPMorgan executives have held closed-door talks with the SEC's Crypto Task Force to discuss how capital market instruments can be migrated to public blockchains, the impact that changes may have on market structures, and how institutions should evaluate the risk control and return models that on-chain finance brings.
According to the minutes of the meeting released by the SEC, the exchanges between the two sides covered multiple cutting-edge directions such as digital repurchases, digital debt instruments, and on-chain financing. JPMorgan Chase & Co. also made it clear that it is actively evaluating whether it can form a structural competitive advantage in terms of asset tokenization and on-chain settlement efficiency.
In addition to "Rushing Dogs", you can also buy stocks on Base
Echoing JPMorgan's exploration of an on-chain banking system, Coinbase is also evolving from an exchange platform to an on-chain asset infrastructure provider. The company's chief legal officer, Paul Grewal, revealed that Coinbase is applying for a no-objection letter from the US SEC to launch a tokenised stock trading service to US customers, subject to an exemption or license. Obtaining a No Objection Letter means that SEC staff will not take enforcement action against Coinbase's launch of the tokenised stock service.
If Coinbase is successfully approved for the tokenised stock business, it will realise the integrated closed-loop asset flow of "stablecoin purchase→ on-chain settlement→ stock trading → rebate consumption" within the same platform for the first time. This not only challenges the trading entry status of brokerages such as Robinhood and Schwab, but may also force these platforms to consider introducing stablecoin payment and on-chain settlement logic, forcing the entire securities industry to enter the era of on-chain assets.
Tokenized shares promise faster settlements, longer trading windows, and lower operating costs. But at the moment, U.S. investors don't have access to such products. Coinbase's new plan means that it will not only be the "NASDAQ" of crypto assets, but also become the on-chain entry point for traditional securities trading.
In fact, Coinbase's exploration of tokenised shares isn't the first of its kind. As early as 2021, the company planned to tokenise its own stock COIN during the S1 filing stage before going public, but it was eventually stranded due to lack of SEC approval.
The attempt is the latest move by Coinbase to expand beyond crypto assets, with the aim of opening up new revenue streams and driving further adoption at the institutional level. Just last week, Coinbase launched an American Express-backed credit card and partnered with Shopify and Stripe to promote the USDC stablecoin payment app.
Regulatory uncertainty has been a major obstacle to the widespread adoption of blockchain securities trading. But with the SEC's plans to adopt DeFi as well as stablecoins, it's clear that regulation is no longer a concern for Coinbase at the moment.
At the same time, competition is intensifying. The news of Coinbase's launch of tokenised shares comes on the heels of Kraken's xStocks project, which was announced weeks ago. The latter has started offering on-chain trading services for more than 50 stocks and ETFs in Europe, Latin America, Africa, and Asian markets. Coinbase needs a faster and clearer regulatory path to deal with the new race to become a crypto broker.
It's all about revenue
According to statistics, retail trading accounts for only about 18% of Coinbase, and from 2024, the proportion of Coinbase's institutional customers' trading volume will continue to increase (Q1 2024 trading volume is $256 billion, accounting for 82.05% of the total trading volume), and with Coinbase's integration of DEX on Base, it should be able to introduce a large amount of liquidity to tens of thousands of Base on-chain tokens, and more importantly, a large number of products in the Base ecosystem will be owned Coinbase's potential for real-world compliance.
Related Reading: Coinbase Wants to Be "Binance in the United States"
This month, Coinbase partnered with Shopify to support USDC payments on Base on the e-commerce checkout page, cutting into cross-border stablecoin payments. On the other hand, the DEX on Base will be integrated into the main Coinbase application to open up the flow channel between on-chain assets and CeFi users. The most disruptive move was the announcement of the launch of a 24/7 perpetual contract trading feature in the United States that complies with the CFTC regulatory framework.
Behind these actions, they all point to a core - rebuilding Coinbase's revenue model. As spot trading revenue shrinks year over year, Coinbase's earnings data shows that its trading revenue is overly reliant on the crypto market cycle. Against this backdrop, derivatives have become a more anti-cyclical source of income. By integrating Deribit's liquidity and user base, Coinbase is building a closed loop on derivatives trading for global institutions, and the CFTC endorsement has created a compliance moat in the U.S. market.
At the same time, Coinbase has partnered with Shopify and Stripe to promote the native use of USDC in e-commerce payment scenarios. Shoppers can pay directly with USDC at checkout on their Shopify store, while merchants can choose to settle in stablecoins or their own currency. Combined with the smart contract hosting and API module on Base, this process does not require consumers or merchants to have cryptographic knowledge, forming a highly scalable "compliant crypto payment engine". Stablecoin transactions not only bring on-chain gas fees and clearing fees, but also open up stable revenue channels for Coinbase in long-tail markets such as small businesses and cross-border e-commerce.
The cooperation between Coinbase One Card and American Express uses rebates as a link to bind users through asset lock-up to further activate the trading behaviour on the platform. Although these products still need to face a trade-off between cost and yield, it reflects Coinbase's strategic vision of gradually integrating "financial services + consumption scenarios".
This rhythm of multi-point attacks is not accidental. In the window period when regulatory benefits are beginning to emerge and the on-chain settlement infrastructure is gradually complete, Coinbase has chosen to use its platform as a hub to build a multi-dimensional revenue network with compliance as the core and diversified asset flows as the characteristic, from DEX and stablecoin payments to derivatives trading. Behind this logic is the key inflection point in Coinbase's transformation from a crypto exchange to an on-chain financial operating system.
Whether it is JPMorgan Chase's JPMD based on bank deposits, or the layout of Coinbase's tokenised securities platform, they all point to the same trend - on-chain finance is entering a period of institutional restructuring driven by regulation, infrastructure and mainstream financial institutions.
The passage of the GENIUS Act, the heated discussion of stablecoins, and the continued experimentation of major institutions on on-chain market infrastructure mean that crypto finance is no longer a marginal experiment, but a realistic choice to gradually embed itself in the structure of global financial markets, and the boundaries between on-chain and off-chain are being broken layer by layer by these first movers.
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COIN price performance in USD
The current price of no-coiners is $0.000059641. Over the last 24 hours, no-coiners has decreased by -49.10%. It currently has a circulating supply of 1,000,000,000 COIN and a maximum supply of 1,000,000,000 COIN, giving it a fully diluted market cap of $59,640.92. The no-coiners/USD price is updated in real-time.
5m
-35.33%
1h
-73.52%
4h
-49.10%
24h
-49.10%
About no-coiners (COIN)
COIN FAQ
What’s the current price of no-coiners?
The current price of 1 COIN is $0.000059641, experiencing a -49.10% change in the past 24 hours.
Can I buy COIN on OKX?
No, currently COIN is unavailable on OKX. To stay updated on when COIN becomes available, sign up for notifications or follow us on social media. We’ll announce new cryptocurrency additions as soon as they’re listed.
Why does the price of COIN fluctuate?
The price of COIN fluctuates due to the global supply and demand dynamics typical of cryptocurrencies. Its short-term volatility can be attributed to significant shifts in these market forces.
How much is 1 no-coiners worth today?
Currently, one no-coiners is worth $0.000059641. For answers and insight into no-coiners's price action, you're in the right place. Explore the latest no-coiners charts and trade responsibly with OKX.
What is cryptocurrency?
Cryptocurrencies, such as no-coiners, are digital assets that operate on a public ledger called blockchains. Learn more about coins and tokens offered on OKX and their different attributes, which includes live prices and real-time charts.
When was cryptocurrency invented?
Thanks to the 2008 financial crisis, interest in decentralized finance boomed. Bitcoin offered a novel solution by being a secure digital asset on a decentralized network. Since then, many other tokens such as no-coiners have been created as well.
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OKX does not provide investment or asset recommendations. You should carefully consider whether trading or holding digital assets is suitable for you in light of your financial condition. Please consult your legal/tax/investment professional for questions about your specific circumstances. For further details, please refer to our Terms of Use and Risk Warning. By using the third-party website ("TPW"), you accept that any use of the TPW will be subject to and governed by the terms of the TPW. Unless expressly stated in writing, OKX and its affiliates (“OKX”) are not in any way associated with the owner or operator of the TPW. You agree that OKX is not responsible or liable for any loss, damage and any other consequences arising from your use of the TPW. Please be aware that using a TPW may result in a loss or diminution of your assets. Product may not be available in all jurisdictions.