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SOL
SOL

wynning price

A2q2z4...Nh2u
$0.000094308
+$0.000059701
(+172.51%)
Price change for the last 24 hours
USDUSD
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SOL 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
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
$94,307.21
Network
Solana
Circulating supply
999,990,601 SOL
Token holders
19
Liquidity
$0.00
1h volume
$5.86M
4h volume
$6.70M
24h volume
$6.70M

wynning Feed

The following content is sourced from .
edgar 🇺🇸/acc
edgar 🇺🇸/acc
this morning, a decision market went live for @mtncapital_ that I personally think marks a very important chapter in its journey: The Premise The crux of the deal is a $1M OTC into $RAY (@RaydiumProtocol), foundational DeFi infrastructure on @solana that has (1) been in the ecosystem from the very beginning (2) survived many of its brutally testing chapters (3) benefits from new structural tailwinds from Solana's recent resurgence. The entry price is at a 30% discount to current, with lockups for ~12-18 months (& the proposal has room for the dao to hold up to 3 years -- details in the prop, linked below) Why I think is this prop is special @mtncapital_ is uniquely structured as a dao, which changes the deals its best positioned for. I think exclusive OTC deals are a category of deals where it leverages unique advantage -- its reputation, and its deep integration into (and composition of) the solana ecosystem. Simply put: I don't think there's another way to get exposure like this aside from doing it through @mtncapital_ , and that's good for the dao. ---- This wouldn't have come together without an effort from a number of teams to make this work -- big thanks to @RaydiumProtocol for the discussions & @MetaDAOProject + @streamflow_fi for the infrastructure support. Trade the prop below!
2.58K
1
OKX
OKX
Bitcoin, but make it DeFi 💁‍♀️ xBTC is awesome because it lets you use BTC across chains like @SuiNetwork, @Aptos & @Solana. Let us explain ...
1.74K
0
MartyParty
MartyParty
The Office Middle East /GENIUS/FOMC $BTC $SOL $SUI
1.45K
0
币圈10U战神jie(币圈罗永浩)
币圈10U战神jie(币圈罗永浩)
Bitcoin rushed to 100,000 7, shock or break? The key this time is to see whether the US stock ETH broke through 2600 is a fake move? 丨6.16 Currency Circle 10U God of War 丨#BTC Analysis #以太坊 #Solana #美联储降息 #加密货币走势 #币圈行情 #加密
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2.65K
0
William Mougayar
William Mougayar
Rethinking Blockchain Valuation for the Age of Decentralized Infrastructure Traditional metrics fail to capture what blockchains really are. A new paradigm is needed—one rooted in usage, monetary flows, public utility, and economic footprint. Valuing blockchains today is like trying to price the internet before we understood what websites were. In the early days of the web, analysts applied familiar but flawed frameworks, eyeballs, banner ad revenue, burn rates, only to discover later that none of these captured what truly drove value. We are in a similar moment with blockchains: despite their economic and social significance, there is no widely accepted or standardized model for how they should be valued. This lack of consensus isn’t due to a shortage of effort. Several frameworks have been proposed, each bringing something to the table, yet each falling short in key ways. It’s time to step back and recognize both the limitations of these existing models and the need for something more native to how blockchain economies function. The DCF and Fee-Based Model: Misapplied Logic The most common approach, particularly among traditional financial analysts, has been to apply Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) models or focus on fees generated by the protocol or its validators. This method treats a blockchain like a software-as-a-service (SaaS) company, estimating its future cash flows and discounting them back to present value. But this framework quickly collapses under scrutiny: Blockchains aren’t companies. They don’t have shareholders, retained earnings, or management seeking to maximize profits. Fee structures are dynamic and often political. Protocols can—and do—lower fees for strategic reasons (e.g., Layer 2 scaling). Subsidies distort reality. Some ecosystems, such as Solana, heavily subsidize validator revenues, which inflates perceived “earnings” without reflecting real, organic usage. Ultimately, DCF assumes a central issuer and a predictable revenue stream, neither of which are natural to decentralized public blockchains. MSOV: The Monetary Store of Value Model Another model gaining traction is the Monetary Store of Value (MSOV) framework, which values a blockchain asset based on how it is used within financial primitives—primarily staking and deposits in on-chain finance. The underlying idea is that an infrastructure token can be understood like a commodity used for economic functions, rather than a security or equity instrument. The MSOV model captures useful elements, especially for “economic base-layer” assets like ETH. However, it has its own limitations: It largely ignores the flow dimension—how capital moves through the ecosystem. It overweights capital sitting idle (e.g., locked/staked ETH) rather than capital actively in use. It may fail to capture emerging use cases like Layer 2 payments, NFTs, and real-world asset tokenization. MSOV is a helpful lens for one facet of valuation—especially for understanding “capital at rest”—but it does not account for the vibrancy or velocity of network activity. On-chain GDP: Thinking Like Economists Another promising category is on-chain GDP models. These attempt to measure the total economic output facilitated by a blockchain network, borrowing from macroeconomic concepts like gross domestic product. Onchain GDP models typically consider: * Fees paid for computation and storage * Total value locked (TVL) * Stablecoin issuance and circulation * Application revenue (on DeFi, NFTs, etc.) * Layer 2 and off-chain asset interactions Importantly, this model is often split into two components: Chain GDP – Activity directly on the base chain (e.g., Ethereum L1) App GDP – Economic activity on top of that chain (e.g., L2 apps, stablecoin usage, DeFi protocols) Onchain GDP is a major step in the right direction, but its limitations are structural: It’s hard to normalize across chains. Not all blockchains publish comparable data, and GDP definitions vary. It lacks granularity. Many “GDP” metrics conflate internal operations (e.g., staking rewards) with actual user-facing value. It still doesn’t track economic velocity. You can measure the size of an economy, but not its pulse. As a sidenote, the data layer aspect of blockchains is still missing from valuation frameworks. A New Lens: Valuing Blockchains by Velocity and Flow Recognizing these gaps, I’m developing an emerging framework centered on monetary velocity and value flow within the blockchain economy. This approach is built on the premise that blockchains are best understood as dynamic economic systems, not static financial entities. In this model, what matters most is not just how much value a chain holds, but how that value moves: How quickly do stablecoins circulate? How often are NFTs traded? How frequently are tokens bridged or swapped? What is the use rate of assets in DeFi protocols? What’s the flow of ETH across L1s, L2s, and dApps? What are the tokenization volumes in real-world assets? These questions underpin the “ETH in Motion” model I introduced. It’s a framework that blends economic theory with on-chain data to derive velocity-adjusted economic value, a proxy for how active, trusted, and productive a blockchain’s economy truly is. Velocity-based valuation offers several advantages: Harder to game: Unlike revenues or TVL, which can be inflated through incentives or wash trading, real economic velocity requires genuine demand. Native to the technology: Flow and velocity align with the open, programmable nature of blockchain-based finance. Captures the entire stack: Whether value flows across apps, chains, or bridges, this model accounts for composability in a multi-chain world. Why This Matters The absence of an accepted valuation standard is more than an academic problem. It: * Confuses investors and allocators trying to differentiate between blockchains * Enables manipulative marketing (e.g., inflating “revenues” to simulate traction) * Hinders the development of credible, data-driven benchmarks for institutional adoption It’s also worth recognizing that we may not find a single valuation model. Just as different equity analysts use EV/EBITDA, P/E, and discounted cash flows depending on the business model, blockchain valuation may require a multidimensional approach—one that blends MSOV, GDP, velocity, and more. Toward a Valuation Framework That Matches the Innovation Blockchain technology is too innovative, too fluid, and too transformative to be pigeonholed into 20th-century financial models. Public blockchains aren’t corporations; they’re networks, platforms, economies, and monetary systems all rolled into one. That complexity demands new thinking. We don’t yet have a widely accepted model. DCF is insufficient. MSOV is useful but partial. GDP gives us scope, but not rhythm. Velocity and flow models may offer the missing ingredient: a way to measure how a blockchain lives. The valuation frameworks of the future will be built, not inherited. And just as early internet investors had to invent new tools to understand what they were seeing, the blockchain world must now do the same. If we get this right, we won’t just value blockchains more accurately. We’ll finally be able to understand what they’re really worth to the world. via @ethereum_mrc
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SOL price performance in USD

The current price of wynning is $0.000094308. Over the last 24 hours, wynning has increased by +172.51%. It currently has a circulating supply of 999,990,601 SOL and a maximum supply of 999,990,601 SOL, giving it a fully diluted market cap of $94,307.21. The wynning/USD price is updated in real-time.
5m
+0.00%
1h
+2.27%
4h
+172.51%
24h
+172.51%

About wynning (SOL)

wynning (SOL) is a decentralized digital currency leveraging blockchain technology for secure transactions.

Why invest in wynning (SOL)?

As a decentralized currency, free from government or financial institution control, wynning is definitely an alternative to traditional fiat currencies. However, investing, trading or buying wynning involves complexity and volatility. Thorough research and risk awareness are essential before investing. Find out more about wynning (SOL) prices and information here on OKX today.

How to buy and store SOL?

To buy and store SOL, you can purchase it on a cryptocurrency exchange or through a peer-to-peer marketplace. After buying SOL, it’s important to securely store it in a crypto wallet, which comes in two forms: hot wallets (software-based, stored on your physical devices) and cold wallets (hardware-based, stored offline).

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SOL FAQ

What’s the current price of wynning?
The current price of 1 SOL is $0.000094308, experiencing a +172.51% change in the past 24 hours.
Can I buy SOL on OKX?
No, currently SOL is unavailable on OKX. To stay updated on when SOL 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 SOL fluctuate?
The price of SOL 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 wynning worth today?
Currently, one wynning is worth $0.000094308. For answers and insight into wynning's price action, you're in the right place. Explore the latest wynning charts and trade responsibly with OKX.
What is cryptocurrency?
Cryptocurrencies, such as wynning, 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 wynning have been created as well.

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Disclaimer

The social content on this page ("Content"), including but not limited to tweets and statistics provided by LunarCrush, is sourced from third parties and provided "as is" for informational purposes only. OKX does not guarantee the quality or accuracy of the Content, and the Content does not represent the views of OKX. It is not intended to provide (i) investment advice or recommendation; (ii) an offer or solicitation to buy, sell or hold digital assets; or (iii) financial, accounting, legal or tax advice. Digital assets, including stablecoins and NFTs, involve a high degree of risk, can fluctuate greatly. The price and performance of the digital assets are not guaranteed and may change without notice.

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