Steem
About Steem
The price of Steem (STEEM) is $0.20596764 today, as of Nov 17 01:47 a.m., with a 24-hour trading volume of $34.94M. Over the last 24 hours, the price has increased by 3.96%. Steem currently has a circulating supply of 476.43M and a market cap of $98.13M.
STEEM is the native currency of Steem, a blockchain that powers a decentralized social network called Steemit.
STEEM launched in April 2016 at 77 cents. It briefly soared to $4.66 in July of that year before falling to 16 cents later that autumn.
The coin hit its all-time high of $8.19 during the 2017/2018 initial coin offering (ICO) boom. STEEM had flatlined by the crypto winter of 2019, cruising along at about 10 cents to 20 cents.
The token again rose in the crypto bull market of 2021, hitting $1.41 in the second quarter, crashing to 23 cents in the summer, and briefly rising to 75 cents in the fourth quarter. When the crypto market crashed even harder in May 2022, STEEM fell as low as 18 cents, a 97% retreat from its all-time high in January 2018.
STEEM started with a supply of 0, but the founders, Dan Larimer and Ned Scott, “ninjamined” (covertly mined) 80% of the coins. These funds became the subject of controversy when Justin Sun, the founder of Tron and CEO of BitTorrent, acquired the network in 2020. The debacle ultimately derailed trust in the network and spawned a hard fork, Hive.
STEEM is an inflationary asset. In 2016, new STEEM was issued at a rate of 9.5% a year. The rate of inflation decreases by 0.01% after every 250,000 blocks, an approximate reduction of about 0.5% a year. The network will continue decreasing its inflation rate until it reaches 0.95%, which should take about 20 years, according to data network provider Messari.
Ten percent of new STEEM coins are awarded to block producers that validate transactions through the blockchain’s consensus mechanism, delegated-proof-of-stake (DPoS). Fifteen percent of the coins go to STEEM stakers (who receive governance tokens steem power, or SP tokens, proportionate to their stake). The remaining 75% of new tokens go to those who post or comment on Steemit, the social network associated with the blockchain.