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USDP
USDP

United States Dominant Peg price

6cz6bb...pump
$0.00011232
+$0.000089427
(+390.67%)
Price change for the last 24 hours
USDUSD
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USDP 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
$112,317.53
Network
Solana
Circulating supply
1,000,000,000 USDP
Token holders
124
Liquidity
$127,143.52
1h volume
$11.31M
4h volume
$11.31M
24h volume
$11.31M

United States Dominant Peg Feed

The following content is sourced from .
davidev.eth 💜
davidev.eth 💜
We stand with @Nick_van_Eck and @withAUSD. They have been a top notch partner when building stable coin based product and I cannot more highly recommend reaching out to their team if you are a builder.
Nick van Eck
Nick van Eck
Pay to Play Much has been made about how parts of the crypto industry operate under a “pay to play” model. This is extractive, harms consumers, and creates opacity in markets. Seemingly, that “pay to play” nature has now permeated the regulated intersection of stablecoins and custodians. Last week an executive from @Anchorage reached out to me offering their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I declined, stating we are in deep conversations on our own licensure, have been operating compliantly since inception and have deep expertise in regulated financial markets due to our team’s career experience and uniquely deep relationship with State Street and VanEck. Following that conversation, Anchorage published a piece, “Anchorage Digital Publishes Stablecoin Safety Matrix, Enables Auto-Conversions to Safe Stablecoins.” In it, they state that Anchorage is delisting both USDC and AUSD for safety concerns, while publishing easily verifiable and known factual inaccuracies. Factual inaccuracies that they have known since our initial listing by Anchorage, corrected again by VanEck representatives before publication of the report, and then were still published and have yet to be retracted. “Specifically, we identified elevated concentration risks associated with their issuer structures—something we believe institutions should carefully evaluate.” Ironically, VanEck has served hundreds more institutional clientele for decades longer than Anchorage has existed. As of writing, VanEck manages more money than the aggregate asset value of all stablecoins in existence, with the exception of Tether. In this report, Anchorage failed to disclose their economic relationship with Paxos, the issuer of 3 of their top 4 rated stablecoins. Partners of Paxos (i.e., Anchorage) earn a revenue share and basis point fee on mints of their stablecoins, and they have a unique preferred agreement where they get ALL of the revenue from those stables if they sit on the Anchorage platform. That relationship is clearly pertinent to potential customers who might read this report. The same Anchorage executive who reached out to me confirmed two companies were planning to use their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I surmise they are deemed “safe” stablecoins. If Anchorage had just delisted USDC and AUSD to prioritize the stablecoins that they have an economic interest in, I would understand it as a business decision. Private businesses can and should act in their own interests. But attempting to delegitimize AUSD and USDC for “security concerns,” while knowingly publishing false information, is unserious and bizarre. So let me reiterate and categorize the errors about AUSD: State Street is the cash custodian and fund administrator of The Agora Reserve Fund. VanEck, a $100B+ asset manager, is the investment manager of The Agora Reserve Fund. Anchorage has known this since initial listing and that was confirmed again by VanEck representatives before publication. By their own matrix AUSD should receive a score similar to or better than USDG if the framework was applied uniformly. I’m sure that Circle, the issuer of USDC, also has similar inaccuracies to correct and claiming that USDC is less safe than USDT, USDG, PYUSD, and USDP clearly belies their true intentions. Circle is a publicly traded company on the NYSE with many years of audited financials and transparency. As the pioneers of the open-partner framework, Agora is constantly expanding our network of support. At Agora, we endeavor to always be the most transparent, customer-driven, programmable money that serves a global customer base. We are underdogs, relish the fight, and will never pay to play. Nick van Eck CEO and Co-Founder of Agora
Show original
140
0
Gregoireljda.eth 🍍
Gregoireljda.eth 🍍
It’s a lame move — nothing else to say Free markets, fair competition and innovation is what serious entrepreneurs *should* stand for Very disappointed by an entity I’ve respected for a long time
Nick van Eck
Nick van Eck
Pay to Play Much has been made about how parts of the crypto industry operate under a “pay to play” model. This is extractive, harms consumers, and creates opacity in markets. Seemingly, that “pay to play” nature has now permeated the regulated intersection of stablecoins and custodians. Last week an executive from @Anchorage reached out to me offering their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I declined, stating we are in deep conversations on our own licensure, have been operating compliantly since inception and have deep expertise in regulated financial markets due to our team’s career experience and uniquely deep relationship with State Street and VanEck. Following that conversation, Anchorage published a piece, “Anchorage Digital Publishes Stablecoin Safety Matrix, Enables Auto-Conversions to Safe Stablecoins.” In it, they state that Anchorage is delisting both USDC and AUSD for safety concerns, while publishing easily verifiable and known factual inaccuracies. Factual inaccuracies that they have known since our initial listing by Anchorage, corrected again by VanEck representatives before publication of the report, and then were still published and have yet to be retracted. “Specifically, we identified elevated concentration risks associated with their issuer structures—something we believe institutions should carefully evaluate.” Ironically, VanEck has served hundreds more institutional clientele for decades longer than Anchorage has existed. As of writing, VanEck manages more money than the aggregate asset value of all stablecoins in existence, with the exception of Tether. In this report, Anchorage failed to disclose their economic relationship with Paxos, the issuer of 3 of their top 4 rated stablecoins. Partners of Paxos (i.e., Anchorage) earn a revenue share and basis point fee on mints of their stablecoins, and they have a unique preferred agreement where they get ALL of the revenue from those stables if they sit on the Anchorage platform. That relationship is clearly pertinent to potential customers who might read this report. The same Anchorage executive who reached out to me confirmed two companies were planning to use their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I surmise they are deemed “safe” stablecoins. If Anchorage had just delisted USDC and AUSD to prioritize the stablecoins that they have an economic interest in, I would understand it as a business decision. Private businesses can and should act in their own interests. But attempting to delegitimize AUSD and USDC for “security concerns,” while knowingly publishing false information, is unserious and bizarre. So let me reiterate and categorize the errors about AUSD: State Street is the cash custodian and fund administrator of The Agora Reserve Fund. VanEck, a $100B+ asset manager, is the investment manager of The Agora Reserve Fund. Anchorage has known this since initial listing and that was confirmed again by VanEck representatives before publication. By their own matrix AUSD should receive a score similar to or better than USDG if the framework was applied uniformly. I’m sure that Circle, the issuer of USDC, also has similar inaccuracies to correct and claiming that USDC is less safe than USDT, USDG, PYUSD, and USDP clearly belies their true intentions. Circle is a publicly traded company on the NYSE with many years of audited financials and transparency. As the pioneers of the open-partner framework, Agora is constantly expanding our network of support. At Agora, we endeavor to always be the most transparent, customer-driven, programmable money that serves a global customer base. We are underdogs, relish the fight, and will never pay to play. Nick van Eck CEO and Co-Founder of Agora
Show original
444
2
AlwaysSunnyNYC
AlwaysSunnyNYC
In crypto, it often feels like we’re adding more layers of extraction than actual efficiency or problems that blockchain can solve.
Nick van Eck
Nick van Eck
Pay to Play Much has been made about how parts of the crypto industry operate under a “pay to play” model. This is extractive, harms consumers, and creates opacity in markets. Seemingly, that “pay to play” nature has now permeated the regulated intersection of stablecoins and custodians. Last week an executive from @Anchorage reached out to me offering their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I declined, stating we are in deep conversations on our own licensure, have been operating compliantly since inception and have deep expertise in regulated financial markets due to our team’s career experience and uniquely deep relationship with State Street and VanEck. Following that conversation, Anchorage published a piece, “Anchorage Digital Publishes Stablecoin Safety Matrix, Enables Auto-Conversions to Safe Stablecoins.” In it, they state that Anchorage is delisting both USDC and AUSD for safety concerns, while publishing easily verifiable and known factual inaccuracies. Factual inaccuracies that they have known since our initial listing by Anchorage, corrected again by VanEck representatives before publication of the report, and then were still published and have yet to be retracted. “Specifically, we identified elevated concentration risks associated with their issuer structures—something we believe institutions should carefully evaluate.” Ironically, VanEck has served hundreds more institutional clientele for decades longer than Anchorage has existed. As of writing, VanEck manages more money than the aggregate asset value of all stablecoins in existence, with the exception of Tether. In this report, Anchorage failed to disclose their economic relationship with Paxos, the issuer of 3 of their top 4 rated stablecoins. Partners of Paxos (i.e., Anchorage) earn a revenue share and basis point fee on mints of their stablecoins, and they have a unique preferred agreement where they get ALL of the revenue from those stables if they sit on the Anchorage platform. That relationship is clearly pertinent to potential customers who might read this report. The same Anchorage executive who reached out to me confirmed two companies were planning to use their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I surmise they are deemed “safe” stablecoins. If Anchorage had just delisted USDC and AUSD to prioritize the stablecoins that they have an economic interest in, I would understand it as a business decision. Private businesses can and should act in their own interests. But attempting to delegitimize AUSD and USDC for “security concerns,” while knowingly publishing false information, is unserious and bizarre. So let me reiterate and categorize the errors about AUSD: State Street is the cash custodian and fund administrator of The Agora Reserve Fund. VanEck, a $100B+ asset manager, is the investment manager of The Agora Reserve Fund. Anchorage has known this since initial listing and that was confirmed again by VanEck representatives before publication. By their own matrix AUSD should receive a score similar to or better than USDG if the framework was applied uniformly. I’m sure that Circle, the issuer of USDC, also has similar inaccuracies to correct and claiming that USDC is less safe than USDT, USDG, PYUSD, and USDP clearly belies their true intentions. Circle is a publicly traded company on the NYSE with many years of audited financials and transparency. As the pioneers of the open-partner framework, Agora is constantly expanding our network of support. At Agora, we endeavor to always be the most transparent, customer-driven, programmable money that serves a global customer base. We are underdogs, relish the fight, and will never pay to play. Nick van Eck CEO and Co-Founder of Agora
Show original
820
1
tmnxeq
tmnxeq
no crying in the Executive Suite. it's just biz, kiddie.
Nick van Eck
Nick van Eck
Pay to Play Much has been made about how parts of the crypto industry operate under a “pay to play” model. This is extractive, harms consumers, and creates opacity in markets. Seemingly, that “pay to play” nature has now permeated the regulated intersection of stablecoins and custodians. Last week an executive from @Anchorage reached out to me offering their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I declined, stating we are in deep conversations on our own licensure, have been operating compliantly since inception and have deep expertise in regulated financial markets due to our team’s career experience and uniquely deep relationship with State Street and VanEck. Following that conversation, Anchorage published a piece, “Anchorage Digital Publishes Stablecoin Safety Matrix, Enables Auto-Conversions to Safe Stablecoins.” In it, they state that Anchorage is delisting both USDC and AUSD for safety concerns, while publishing easily verifiable and known factual inaccuracies. Factual inaccuracies that they have known since our initial listing by Anchorage, corrected again by VanEck representatives before publication of the report, and then were still published and have yet to be retracted. “Specifically, we identified elevated concentration risks associated with their issuer structures—something we believe institutions should carefully evaluate.” Ironically, VanEck has served hundreds more institutional clientele for decades longer than Anchorage has existed. As of writing, VanEck manages more money than the aggregate asset value of all stablecoins in existence, with the exception of Tether. In this report, Anchorage failed to disclose their economic relationship with Paxos, the issuer of 3 of their top 4 rated stablecoins. Partners of Paxos (i.e., Anchorage) earn a revenue share and basis point fee on mints of their stablecoins, and they have a unique preferred agreement where they get ALL of the revenue from those stables if they sit on the Anchorage platform. That relationship is clearly pertinent to potential customers who might read this report. The same Anchorage executive who reached out to me confirmed two companies were planning to use their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I surmise they are deemed “safe” stablecoins. If Anchorage had just delisted USDC and AUSD to prioritize the stablecoins that they have an economic interest in, I would understand it as a business decision. Private businesses can and should act in their own interests. But attempting to delegitimize AUSD and USDC for “security concerns,” while knowingly publishing false information, is unserious and bizarre. So let me reiterate and categorize the errors about AUSD: State Street is the cash custodian and fund administrator of The Agora Reserve Fund. VanEck, a $100B+ asset manager, is the investment manager of The Agora Reserve Fund. Anchorage has known this since initial listing and that was confirmed again by VanEck representatives before publication. By their own matrix AUSD should receive a score similar to or better than USDG if the framework was applied uniformly. I’m sure that Circle, the issuer of USDC, also has similar inaccuracies to correct and claiming that USDC is less safe than USDT, USDG, PYUSD, and USDP clearly belies their true intentions. Circle is a publicly traded company on the NYSE with many years of audited financials and transparency. As the pioneers of the open-partner framework, Agora is constantly expanding our network of support. At Agora, we endeavor to always be the most transparent, customer-driven, programmable money that serves a global customer base. We are underdogs, relish the fight, and will never pay to play. Nick van Eck CEO and Co-Founder of Agora
Show original
1.01K
0
Joshua Lim
Joshua Lim
FalconX is ready to support clients using AUSD and USDC. Agora and @circle are long-standing partners of ours, and our customers count on safe, transparent rails for USD settlement.
Nick van Eck
Nick van Eck
Pay to Play Much has been made about how parts of the crypto industry operate under a “pay to play” model. This is extractive, harms consumers, and creates opacity in markets. Seemingly, that “pay to play” nature has now permeated the regulated intersection of stablecoins and custodians. Last week an executive from @Anchorage reached out to me offering their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I declined, stating we are in deep conversations on our own licensure, have been operating compliantly since inception and have deep expertise in regulated financial markets due to our team’s career experience and uniquely deep relationship with State Street and VanEck. Following that conversation, Anchorage published a piece, “Anchorage Digital Publishes Stablecoin Safety Matrix, Enables Auto-Conversions to Safe Stablecoins.” In it, they state that Anchorage is delisting both USDC and AUSD for safety concerns, while publishing easily verifiable and known factual inaccuracies. Factual inaccuracies that they have known since our initial listing by Anchorage, corrected again by VanEck representatives before publication of the report, and then were still published and have yet to be retracted. “Specifically, we identified elevated concentration risks associated with their issuer structures—something we believe institutions should carefully evaluate.” Ironically, VanEck has served hundreds more institutional clientele for decades longer than Anchorage has existed. As of writing, VanEck manages more money than the aggregate asset value of all stablecoins in existence, with the exception of Tether. In this report, Anchorage failed to disclose their economic relationship with Paxos, the issuer of 3 of their top 4 rated stablecoins. Partners of Paxos (i.e., Anchorage) earn a revenue share and basis point fee on mints of their stablecoins, and they have a unique preferred agreement where they get ALL of the revenue from those stables if they sit on the Anchorage platform. That relationship is clearly pertinent to potential customers who might read this report. The same Anchorage executive who reached out to me confirmed two companies were planning to use their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I surmise they are deemed “safe” stablecoins. If Anchorage had just delisted USDC and AUSD to prioritize the stablecoins that they have an economic interest in, I would understand it as a business decision. Private businesses can and should act in their own interests. But attempting to delegitimize AUSD and USDC for “security concerns,” while knowingly publishing false information, is unserious and bizarre. So let me reiterate and categorize the errors about AUSD: State Street is the cash custodian and fund administrator of The Agora Reserve Fund. VanEck, a $100B+ asset manager, is the investment manager of The Agora Reserve Fund. Anchorage has known this since initial listing and that was confirmed again by VanEck representatives before publication. By their own matrix AUSD should receive a score similar to or better than USDG if the framework was applied uniformly. I’m sure that Circle, the issuer of USDC, also has similar inaccuracies to correct and claiming that USDC is less safe than USDT, USDG, PYUSD, and USDP clearly belies their true intentions. Circle is a publicly traded company on the NYSE with many years of audited financials and transparency. As the pioneers of the open-partner framework, Agora is constantly expanding our network of support. At Agora, we endeavor to always be the most transparent, customer-driven, programmable money that serves a global customer base. We are underdogs, relish the fight, and will never pay to play. Nick van Eck CEO and Co-Founder of Agora
Show original
3.02K
39

USDP price performance in USD

The current price of united-states-dominant-peg is $0.00011232. Over the last 24 hours, united-states-dominant-peg has increased by +390.67%. It currently has a circulating supply of 1,000,000,000 USDP and a maximum supply of 1,000,000,000 USDP, giving it a fully diluted market cap of $112,317.53. The united-states-dominant-peg/USD price is updated in real-time.
5m
+20.13%
1h
+390.67%
4h
+390.67%
24h
+390.67%

About United States Dominant Peg (USDP)

United States Dominant Peg (USDP) is a decentralized digital currency leveraging blockchain technology for secure transactions.

Why invest in United States Dominant Peg (USDP)?

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

How to buy and store USDP?

To buy and store USDP, you can purchase it on a cryptocurrency exchange or through a peer-to-peer marketplace. After buying USDP, 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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USDP FAQ

What’s the current price of United States Dominant Peg?
The current price of 1 USDP is $0.00011232, experiencing a +390.67% change in the past 24 hours.
Can I buy USDP on OKX?
No, currently USDP is unavailable on OKX. To stay updated on when USDP 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 USDP fluctuate?
The price of USDP 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 United States Dominant Peg worth today?
Currently, one United States Dominant Peg is worth $0.00011232. For answers and insight into United States Dominant Peg's price action, you're in the right place. Explore the latest United States Dominant Peg charts and trade responsibly with OKX.
What is cryptocurrency?
Cryptocurrencies, such as United States Dominant Peg, 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 United States Dominant Peg 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.

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.
Start your crypto journey
Start your crypto journey
Faster, better, stronger than your average crypto exchange.