Maker price

in EUR
€1,314.85
-€27.86 (-2.08%)
EUR
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Market cap
€1.19B #45
Circulating supply
901.31K / 1.01M
All-time high
€5,442.61
24h volume
€60.53M
4.4 / 5
MKRMKR
EUREUR

About Maker

MKR, short for Maker, is the governance token of the MakerDAO ecosystem, a pioneering decentralized finance (DeFi) project built on the Ethereum blockchain. MakerDAO is best known for its role in creating DAI, a stablecoin pegged to the US dollar, which allows users to access liquidity without relying on traditional banks. MKR plays a crucial role in the system by enabling holders to vote on key decisions, such as risk parameters and upgrades, ensuring the stability and efficiency of the protocol. As a governance token, MKR empowers its community to shape the future of decentralized finance, making it an essential asset for those interested in the evolution of blockchain-based financial systems.
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Maker’s price performance

Past year
-17.17%
€1.59K
3 months
-2.81%
€1.35K
30 days
-23.90%
€1.73K
7 days
-5.60%
€1.39K

Maker on socials

Blockbeats
Blockbeats
Interpreting the crypto project buyback craze: Why don't currency prices buy it?
Original title: Do Token Buybacks Work? Original author: RichKing | RPS AI Original compilation: TechFlow In our conversations with developers, we found that simple guidelines on on-chain liquidity management are very rare for early teams. As liquidity providers (LPs) and on-chain market makers, we often see common mistakes that go unnoticed until they evolve into costly problems. And most centralized exchanges (CEXs) market makers don't seem to provide much guidance on how to manage on-chain liquidity. Heavendex AMM (Automated Market Maker) has established a mechanism where all transaction fees are used to buy back tokens. Heavendex's token, $LIGHT, is also involved in these buyback systems. TLDR: Scarcity ≠ appeal Buying back tokens reduces the supply. When supply decreases, people may think that demand will increase, driving up value. However, many cryptocurrency tokens do not have an inherent foundational need. Most of the demand comes from attention and cognitive share, which are often the main focus of most projects. As the industry matures, projects with stronger fundamentals will make the buyback mechanism more effective in the long run. We have seen some projects start experimenting with the "flywheel effect" (protocol-level buyback mechanism) that aims to tie basic income to token value. It remains to be seen whether these attempts will be successful. At the same time, buybacks are often used to alleviate negative sentiment or create short-term price fluctuations, with mixed effects. What exactly can token buybacks bring? Before diving into buybacks in the crypto space, let's take a look at some cases of Web2 companies. In traditional open markets, buybacks are typically used for the following purposes: · Boost stock price · Create scarcity · Reward shareholders · Consume excess cash Apple is a typical example – since 2012, Apple has spent more than $650 billion on buybacks and reduced the number of shares by about 40%. The reason why this strategy worked was Apple's continued profit growth. In contrast, buybacks by General Electric (GE), IBM, or some oil giants have failed to stop stock prices from falling as the fundamentals of these companies gradually deteriorate. From 2010 to 2019, Apple reduced its outstanding shares by more than 50% through a series of aggressive programmatic buybacks. During the same period, its stock price rose from $11 to $40 per share, a 300% increase. Why are stock buybacks more signaling than token buybacks? Will the crypto space start adopting earnings per share (EPS) as a way to assess token value? Share buybacks directly increase earnings per share (EPS) by reducing the number of outstanding shares. Investors are very concerned about EPS and valuation multiples. However, in the crypto space, there is no such thing as an EPS-like metric. Prices are driven more by attention, liquidity, and narrative than financial comparisons. Additionally, programmatic buybacks in cryptocurrencies face a problem: revenue is cyclical, often fluctuating with bull and bear markets. Founder's Buyback Decision Checklist: Should You Do a Repo? Does your protocol have a steady stream of revenue? (Or are you consuming your capital reserves?) ) Are your financial reserves strong enough to support buybacks without compromising growth? Do you combine buybacks with fundamentals, such as product launches, partnerships, or user growth? Are you aiming for price support or just to create a surface effect? If the answer leans towards "surface effects," you may have just pushed an exit pull-up. Types of token buybacks Different repurchase methods are suitable for different scenarios. The whole process of repurchase: before, during and after · Announcement of buyback plans: Sometimes the market reaction stems only from the announcement of the buyback program ("early pricing" news). · Execution of buybacks: In some cases, the execution of buybacks can trigger a sell-off – providing exit liquidity for holders waiting to sell. · Programmatic buybacks: Considered the most preferred but volatile during cyclical revenue fluctuations. For example, Raydium has burned over $175 million in RAY, but its price still fluctuates with market attention cycles. · Overpaying: If the buyback is executed at a high valuation, it will consume more capital reserves. Employing algorithms or volume-based weighting can help smooth out this process. Case study Hyperliquid ($HYPE): 97% of its decentralized exchange (DEX) revenue is used for daily buybacks of approximately $3 million, with an estimated annual revenue of $650 million. With strong revenue and bold buyback programs, $HYPE is often hailed as the most successful buyback project. (The next question is, when or will the foundation be sold?) ) $HYPE's buyback scale is similar to Web2's Microsoft, with a market capitalization/fully diluted valuation (MCAP/FDV) buyback ratio of 82 times, and the annual buyback scale is very significant compared to the circulating supply. · Pumpfun ($PUMP): On-chain buyback and burning 118,351 SOL, triggering a 20% price increase, but the price fell back within a day. Scarcity doesn't translate into attractiveness – rival BONK continues to grab the spotlight. (As of August 22, 2025, Pumpfun has regained market share leadership, but $PUMP has yet to react.) ) · Raydium ($RAY): Programmatic repo combined with a one-sided SOL liquidity experiment. The latter takes a healthier approach by creating price floors rather than chasing price increases. Unilateral liquidity creates huge passive buybacks at the $2.89 price level. · BNB Burn: The largest and most stable buyback/burn model in the crypto industry (programmatic burns based on centralized exchange revenue, cumulatively burning $35 billion in BNB). The success of this model is due to Binance's ability to generate billions of dollars in revenue annually through fees, providing sustainable financial support. · MakerDAO Surplus Auction and Burn: Protocol revenue is used to buy and burn MKR. Buybacks can become unprofitable due to market pullbacks, necessitating effective money management systems to optimize return on investment (ROI). Investor perspective: Where does the money for repurchases come from? Smart money looks at the essence through the surface. The signal strength levels of repo are as follows: · Strong signals supported by sustained revenue → · Programmatic repo with a fee-linked → medium signal · Opportunistic buybacks, supported by capital reserves → weak signals · One-time burning, consuming fund reserves → bearish signal Buybacks backed by protocol revenue are a positive sign, while buybacks that cut capital reserves are red flags. For example, a Solana project with a fully diluted valuation (FDV) of $5 million has a manual buyback program (each orange line represents 0.5% of the total token supply repurchased). With buybacks, the project has increased its portfolio value by 4x and has used this growth to actively manage liquidity. Three rules for valid token buybacks 1. It must be supported by sustainable income (not a one-time reserve burn). 2. Must be combined with fundamentals (e.g., product launches, partnerships, or user growth). 3. It must be transparent and predictable so that holders build confidence and not sell in short-term price fluctuations. Final summary: In the stock market, buybacks amplify fundamentals. In the crypto space, buybacks can create scarcity – but scarcity doesn't equate to attractiveness. Unless the protocol can build stickiness, ongoing revenue, and demand-side utility, buybacks are mostly narrative tools. Combining buybacks with real fundamentals, it can be a strong signal; If it is only used as a cosmetic effect, it will only help others to withdraw. Other examples: $RAY Buybacks and price trends from July 2022 to July 2025 $PUMP Buybacks and price action from July 17 to August 4 Original link
作业借你抄
作业借你抄
ETH has broken new highs a few days ago, and although it has followed the broader market pullback, its performance is still strong In stark contrast, layer2 tokens are still hovering at a trough, as L2 token prices have fluctuated with ETH As strong as @arbitrum, TVL is as high as 20 billion, and the current market value is only $3 billion I remember when $ARB was $2, the market value was also 3 billion, but the TVL was only about 3B at that time At that time, everyone was intoxicated with high FDV fantasies, deceiving each other for various reasons, forming the "illusion of low circulation and high market capitalization" As the bubble burst, $ARB continued to be unlocked, massive selling pressure, and although the market value did not change much, the token price fell sharply, but this was also the moment of "squeezing the bubble" Remember that Vitalik @VitalikButerin said that it supports L2 using local currency as a GAS token #Arbitrum is undoubtedly the most successful project in L2, and if ARB can become a GAS token, it is indeed an ace up its sleeve As a hair-styling enthusiast, I still have a trouser pocket $strk $zk not sold, and after thinking about it carefully, maybe changing positions in ARB is a good choice #ARB #zk #strk
Zuse
Zuse
In a few years, it will be clear how much of @Dust_Org's story is actually told through denizens that built on it. The world by itself is just a base layer, what will give it weight will be the things people dared to build on top, the experiments that became infrastructure, the names that outlived entire cycles. These projects won't be cosmetic, they will be survival, because without them, DUST will have stayed a fragile experiment. The projects will carry ethereum forward when it could have collapsed under its own weight. and that’s why i don’t just see dust as digital matter anymore, i see the projects that kept showing up, cycle after cycle, building through the noise until the noise became irrelevant. dust didn’t grow up on its own. the projects did the heavy lifting.
𝔽𝔼ℝℤ (♞,♞)
𝔽𝔼ℝℤ (♞,♞)
sometimes i forget how much of ethereum’s story is actually told through the projects that built on it. the chain by itself is just a base layer, what gave it weight were the things people dared to build on top, the experiments that became infrastructure, the names that outlived entire cycles. uniswap changed the way we think about markets, just a pool of liquidity and a swap button. it literally defined what defi even means. makerDAO gave us dai, and with it, the first stablecoin that wasn’t backed by some corporation’s promises. dai was proof that stability could exist without banks, ut became the quiet backbone of countless protocols that followed. aave took lending and borrowing and stripped away the institution, suddenly credit wasn’t about trust in a person, it was about trust in code. then came lido; staking was supposed to be technical, hardware-heavy, inaccessible to most. lido turned it into a collective effort, liquid staking that anyone could access, and in the process it ended up shaping half of ethereum’s validator set. ens sounds small until you use it, a string of numbers became a name, and with it, identity on-chain stopped feeling alien. and then the layer 2s. arbitrum. optimism. base. they didn’t compete with ethereum, they actually carried it. millions of transactions that would have drowned the base chain found room to breathe on these highways, still anchored back to ethereum security. these projects weren’t cosmetic, they were survival, because without them, ethereum would have stayed a fragile experiment. high fees would have priced people out, complexity would have scared people away, and eventually the story would’ve been told on another chain. but the projects stayed, they adapted, they carried ethereum forward when it could have collapsed under its own weight. and that’s why i don’t just see ethereum as a coin anymore, i see the projects that kept showing up, cycle after cycle, building through the noise until the noise became irrelevant. ethereum didn’t grow up on its own. the projects did the heavy lifting.

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Maker FAQ

While both tokens are part of the MakerDAO ecosystem, MKR is a governance token, and its primary role is to oversee the protocol's operation and stability. In contrast, DAI is a stablecoin pegged to the US dollar, designed to maintain its value despite market volatility.

DAI's stability is ensured through over-collateralization, liquidation processes, MKR governance, stability fees, and the DAI Savings Rate (DSR). Combined, these mechanisms help keep DAI's value close to $1. 

Easily buy MKR tokens on the OKX cryptocurrency platform. Available trading pairs in the OKX spot trading terminal include MKR/BTC, MKR/USDC, and MKR/USDT.

You can also buy MKR with over 99 fiat currencies by selecting the "Express buy" option. Other popular crypto tokens, such as Bitcoin (BTC), Tether (USDT), and USD Coin (USDC), are also available.

Alternatively, you can swap your existing cryptocurrencies, including XRP (XRP), Cardano (ADA), Solana (SOL), and Chainlink (LINK), for MKR with zero fees and no price slippage by using OKX Convert.

To view the estimated real-time conversion prices between fiat currencies, such as the USD, EUR, GBP, and others, into MKR, visit the OKX Crypto Converter Calculator. OKX's high-liquidity crypto exchange ensures the best prices for your crypto purchases.

Currently, one Maker is worth €1,314.85. For answers and insight into Maker's price action, you're in the right place. Explore the latest Maker charts and trade responsibly with OKX.
Cryptocurrencies, such as Maker, 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.
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 Maker have been created as well.
Check out our Maker price prediction page to forecast future prices and determine your price targets.

Dive deeper into Maker

In a push towards decentralization, governance tokens have emerged as a cornerstone of many crypto projects, allowing token holders to stake and vote on protocol modifications. MKR is the governance token for MakerDAO, which plays a pivotal role in ensuring the efficiency, transparency, and stability of DAI, a decentralized, collateral-backed stablecoin. 

What is MakerDAO

MakerDAO is a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) that administers the DAI stablecoin through the Maker Protocol. This protocol enables the minting and management of DAI stablecoins while maintaining their peg to the US dollar using over-collateralization and other mechanisms. The primary responsibility of MKR holders is to vote on changes to the Maker Protocol, which directly impacts DAI. MKR's governance role ensures that the protocol adjusts and evolves in response to the market's demands and potential risks. 

The Maker team

Maker was created in 2015 by Rune Christensen, a Denmark-based entrepreneur. He graduated from the Copenhagen University with a degree in biochemistry. He also studied international business at the local Copenhagen Business School. Before founding MakerDAO, he co-founded Try China, an international recruiting company.

How does MakerDAO work

MKR holders are at the heart of the MakerDAO system, actively participating in Executive Voting. Successful votes translate into changes within the protocol. For instance, these token holders set the DAI savings rate, directly impacting the incentives for those who stake DAI. Contributors are rewarded for their active involvement. 

MKR tokenomics 

MKR tokens, capped at 977,631 in supply, are central to the MakerDAO ecosystem. They empower holders with governance rights, allowing them to shape the system's direction. Beyond governance, MKR is crucial in maintaining DAI's stability, ensuring its value remains pegged and resilient to market fluctuations. Notably, in situations of undercollateralization, MKR is auctioned to cover the deficit.

Furthermore, MKR tokens are used to settle stability fees, which are essentially interest charges on DAI loans. These MKR tokens are subsequently burnt, gradually reducing their overall supply and adding an element of scarcity.

MKR distribution

The distribution breakdown for MKR is as follows:

  • 69.5 percent: Founders and the project
  • 15 percent: Team
  • 4 percent: Seed round 1
  • 6 percent: Seed round 2
  • 5.5 percent: Seed round 3

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Market cap
€1.19B #45
Circulating supply
901.31K / 1.01M
All-time high
€5,442.61
24h volume
€60.53M
4.4 / 5
MKRMKR
EUREUR
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