CAN price
in USDCAN’s price performance
Right now, CAN has 942.00 holders, which may translate to its level of adoption and social credibility. It’s got a maximum supply of 1,000M – the number of CAN tokens won’t go beyond this limit. The current circulating supply is 1,000M, representing the number of CAN tokens currently available in the market. CAN’s liquidity of $200.87K also indicates how much of CAN can be bought or sold without significantly affecting its price.
Last updated: 3 Dec 2025, 03:44:21 am
CAN in the news
The move marks the first time spot crypto assets can trade on a federally regulated commodities venue, signaling the CFTC’s accelerating push to oversee retail digital-asset markets.
Bank of Israel Governor Amir Yaron said stablecoins can no longer be viewed as marginal, citing their trillion-dollar trading volumes and growing systemic risks.
The permissions give Ripple more bandwidth to offer token-based settlement and related payment services to banks, fintechs and crypto firms operating in the city-state.
A sharp market pullback has exposed which BTC-focused public companies can actually execute, and which were never built for volatility.
The designation means licensed firms can use the dollar-pegged token for regulated activities, placing it into a small group of tokens permitted by the ADGM’s ring-fenced financial system.
The pilot's goal was to show how banks can use Google’s Universal Ledger to settle fiat payments in real time without new digital currencies.
The nation's fifth-largest commercial bank explores how a bank can issue stablecoins on a public blockchain.
Monad’s listing illustrates how low-float launches can anchor valuation even when macro conditions point in the opposite direction, leaving traders mispricing outcomes that hinge more on supply than on sentiment.
Monero's network activity reflects the real-world demand for privacy coins, but Zcash’s spike looks more like a high-beta market trade that is no longer tied to network activity.
The billionaire founder of hedge fund Bridgewater believes Bitcoin faces major hurdles before it can become a global reserve currency.
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Dive deeper into CAN
CAN (CAN) is a decentralized digital currency leveraging blockchain technology for secure transactions.
Why invest in CAN (CAN)?
As a decentralized currency, free from government or financial institution control, CAN is definitely an alternative to traditional fiat currencies. However, investing, trading or buying CAN involves complexity and volatility. Thorough research and risk awareness are essential before investing. Find out more about CAN (CAN) prices and information here on OKX today.
How to buy and store CAN?
To buy and store CAN, you can purchase it on a cryptocurrency exchange or through a peer-to-peer marketplace. After buying CAN, 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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