Please note, this is a STATIC archive of website www.coindesk.com from 28 Feb 2023, cach3.com does not collect or store any user information, there is no "phishing" involved.
$2.02
24H %
-0.59%
24H Low
$2.00
24H High
$2.07
DownloadIcon
TO

Linear
Log

About Qtum

Sector

Smart Contract Platform


Industry Group

Multi-Chain/Parachain


Industry

Multi-Chain/Parachain



The Qtum price is $2.02, a change of -0.59% over the past 24 hours as of 3:11 p.m. The recent price action in Qtum left the tokens market capitalization at $210,594,037.18. So far this year, Qtum has a change of -76.74%. Qtum is classified as a Smart Contract Platform under CoinDesks Digital Asset Classification Standard (DACS).


QTUM is the native cryptocurrency of Qtum, which is a blockchain technology designed to combine the smart contract element of the Ethereum blockchain with the stable blockchain characteristics of Bitcoin and use the proof-of-stake consensus mechanism to verify ownership. Using QTUM, developers can create and deploy their own native decentralized applications (dapps) that get the security benefits of Bitcoin’s blockchain infrastructure.

QTUM Price

QTUM has a total supply of 107.8 million tokens, although its circulating supply is slightly less than that.

The initial QTUM supply consisted of 100 million tokens, which were released during the token’s launch. The supply increases over time because of new blocks adding four new QTUM tokens into circulation as a reward for network validators (people who help verify new transaction data that’s added to the blockchain). The block rewards halve every four years and are expected to reach zero by 2045.

The initial supply was distributed as follows:

  • 51% was sold through an initial coin offering (ICO).
  • 8% was sold privately.
  • The team kept 12% with a four-year lockup period.
  • The remaining 29% was put in the hands of the nonprofit Qtum Foundation to be used for promotion, academic research and business development.

QTUM hit its all-time high of $100.22 in January 2018 and its all-time low of $0.783142 in March 2020.

After the all-time high, the QTUM price began to slide as the broader crypto market retreated, resulting in a price of $4.49 by August 2018. It then continued a further slow decline to the all-time low before picking up some upward momentum in late December 2020.

In May 2021, QTUM surpassed $25 again but retraced to $7.5 in the following weeks. The token’s price has remained volatile since then as the prices of other cryptocurrencies have been.

How Does Qtum Work?

Qtum borrows the “unspent transaction output” (UTXO) model from Bitcoin – the system for tracking account balances – and smart contract functionality from Ethereum. It also uses a virtual machine (called x86) like Ethereum does – a computer environment where network participants called nodes can execute smart contracts. The combination of Bitcoin’s transaction model and Ethereum’s smart contracts is possible because of QTUM’s Account Abstraction layer. That tool essentially acts as a bridge between the two technologies.

Additionally, Qtum uses a decentralized governance protocol to let community members vote on things like block sizes and base gas fees without requiring a network hard fork.

Developers can deploy Ethereum dapps on Qtum with ease. As a blockchain, Qtum caters to businesses and developers and it can operate with the systems of external partners.

Key Events and Management

Qtum was founded in 2016 by Chinese blockchain expert Patrick Dai, software developer Neil Mahi of Singapore and Jordan Earls, a web developer from the U.S. All three were still on board with Qtum as of November 2021.

The project secured $1 million during a January 2017 seed fundraising round. Its initial coin offering in March 2017 raised $15.6 million, and Qtum added another $400,000 in funding in December 2018 with a grant.

In 2019, Qtum had a hard fork to Qtum 2.0. The platform upgraded its consensus mechanism and added new features, such as offline staking, chain-cloud integration and confidential assets.


Previously Aired
CDTV logo

Quantum Economics Bitcoin Analyst Jason Deane joins "All About Bitcoin" to discuss his markets outlook as the lending arm of crypto investment bank Genesis Global Trading is temporarily suspending redemptions and new loan originations in the wake of FTX’s collapse. Plus, a conversation with Castle Island Ventures Partner Nic Carter about why proof of reserves could help to win back public trust in crypto.

$210.59M

$16.31M


Qtum Price

24H Open
$2.03
24H Change
$-0.01193913
52 Week Low
$1.87
52 Week High
$17.10
All Time High
$100.22
Returns (YTD)
-76.74%

Qtum Market Stats

Total Supply
104.42M
Max Supply
N/A
24H Value Transacted
N/A
30D Volatility
1.19
24H Transaction Count
N/A
24H Average Transaction Fee
N/A

About Qtum

Sector

Smart Contract Platform


Industry Group

Multi-Chain/Parachain


Industry

Multi-Chain/Parachain



The Qtum price is $2.02, a change of -0.59% over the past 24 hours as of 3:11 p.m. The recent price action in Qtum left the tokens market capitalization at $210,594,037.18. So far this year, Qtum has a change of -76.74%. Qtum is classified as a Smart Contract Platform under CoinDesks Digital Asset Classification Standard (DACS).


QTUM is the native cryptocurrency of Qtum, which is a blockchain technology designed to combine the smart contract element of the Ethereum blockchain with the stable blockchain characteristics of Bitcoin and use the proof-of-stake consensus mechanism to verify ownership. Using QTUM, developers can create and deploy their own native decentralized applications (dapps) that get the security benefits of Bitcoin’s blockchain infrastructure.

QTUM Price

QTUM has a total supply of 107.8 million tokens, although its circulating supply is slightly less than that.

The initial QTUM supply consisted of 100 million tokens, which were released during the token’s launch. The supply increases over time because of new blocks adding four new QTUM tokens into circulation as a reward for network validators (people who help verify new transaction data that’s added to the blockchain). The block rewards halve every four years and are expected to reach zero by 2045.

The initial supply was distributed as follows:

  • 51% was sold through an initial coin offering (ICO).
  • 8% was sold privately.
  • The team kept 12% with a four-year lockup period.
  • The remaining 29% was put in the hands of the nonprofit Qtum Foundation to be used for promotion, academic research and business development.

QTUM hit its all-time high of $100.22 in January 2018 and its all-time low of $0.783142 in March 2020.

After the all-time high, the QTUM price began to slide as the broader crypto market retreated, resulting in a price of $4.49 by August 2018. It then continued a further slow decline to the all-time low before picking up some upward momentum in late December 2020.

In May 2021, QTUM surpassed $25 again but retraced to $7.5 in the following weeks. The token’s price has remained volatile since then as the prices of other cryptocurrencies have been.

How Does Qtum Work?

Qtum borrows the “unspent transaction output” (UTXO) model from Bitcoin – the system for tracking account balances – and smart contract functionality from Ethereum. It also uses a virtual machine (called x86) like Ethereum does – a computer environment where network participants called nodes can execute smart contracts. The combination of Bitcoin’s transaction model and Ethereum’s smart contracts is possible because of QTUM’s Account Abstraction layer. That tool essentially acts as a bridge between the two technologies.

Additionally, Qtum uses a decentralized governance protocol to let community members vote on things like block sizes and base gas fees without requiring a network hard fork.

Developers can deploy Ethereum dapps on Qtum with ease. As a blockchain, Qtum caters to businesses and developers and it can operate with the systems of external partners.

Key Events and Management

Qtum was founded in 2016 by Chinese blockchain expert Patrick Dai, software developer Neil Mahi of Singapore and Jordan Earls, a web developer from the U.S. All three were still on board with Qtum as of November 2021.

The project secured $1 million during a January 2017 seed fundraising round. Its initial coin offering in March 2017 raised $15.6 million, and Qtum added another $400,000 in funding in December 2018 with a grant.

In 2019, Qtum had a hard fork to Qtum 2.0. The platform upgraded its consensus mechanism and added new features, such as offline staking, chain-cloud integration and confidential assets.


Market Analysis
Social Analysis

Trending Assets

Bitcoin Calculator

Last Updated on 11/17/22 3:11 PM

CoinDesk’s Bitcoin and Cryptocurrency Calculator determines the exchange rates between major fiat currencies and cryptocurrencies – including BTC, BCH, ETH and XRP to USD, EUR, GBP, IDR and NGN – with up to six decimal places of accuracy. Conversion rates are based on CoinDesk’s Bitcoin Price Index and the price indices of other digital assets. World currency prices are based on rates obtained via Open Exchange Rates.


Latest About Qtum

CoinDesk - Unknown
Blockchain Project Qtum Moves to Boost Network Participation With Offline Staking

The hybrid blockchain will soon undergo a fork enabling network participants to stake and earn rewards from tokens held in offline wallets.

CoinDesk - Unknown
CoinDesk - Unknown
CoinDCX Becomes First India Exchange to Offer Users Crypto Staking

Mumbai-based cryptocurrency exchange CoinDCX launched its new product on Friday, allowing users to stake cryptocurrencies from Harmony, Qtum and Tron.

CoinDesk - Unknown
CoinDesk - Unknown
Qtum Blockchain Becomes Amazon Web Services Partner in China

Amazon Web Services' China unit is partnering with blockchain project Qtum to develop blockchain-as-a-service solutions for enterprises.

CoinDesk - Unknown

Disclaimer
Any data, text or other content on this page is provided as general market information and not as investment advice. Past performance is not necessarily an indicator of future results. CoinDesk is an independently managed media company, wholly owned by the Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups. DCG has no operational input into the selection or duration of CoinDesk content in all its forms.