Market
Qtum
Qtum
QTUM
$1.4815
-2.04%
Buy
Sell
One time
USD
QTUM
≈
6.75
QTUM
$50
$150
$500
Pay with
Google Pay
Apple Pay
USD Account
1-2 business days • No fees
Credit/debit card
Instant •
2.99%
0% fee first 30 days
Market
Qtum
QTUM
$1.4815
-2.04%
Buy
Sell
One time
USD
QTUM
≈
6.75
QTUM
$50
$150
$500
Pay with
Google Pay
Apple Pay
USD Account
1-2 business days • No fees
Credit/debit card
Instant •
2.99%
0% fee first 30 days
Explorers
View
Whitepaper
View
Website
View
Source Code
View
Market data
Market cap
$156.91M
Rank
#171
24H volume
$19.6M
Circulating supply
105.92M QTUM
98% of total
All-time high
$106.88
-7114.04%
All-time low
$0.77
48.02%
Total supply
107.82M QTUM
Max supply
107.82M QTUM
About Qtum
Qtum Price Summaries
Qtum's price today is $1.48, with a 24-hour trading volume of $19.6M. QTUM is -2.04% in the last 24 hours. It is currently -10.03% from its 7-day all-time high of $1.65, and 6.07% from its 7-day all-time low of $1.40.QTUM has a circulating supply of 105.92M QTUM and a max supply of 107.82M QTUM.Qtum aims to combine the best of Bitcoin and Ethereum. Qtum is an open-source public blockchain platform that leverages Ethereum’s smart contract functionality and combines it with the security provided by Bitcoin’s unspent transaction output model (UTXO). Qtum’s goal is to create a platform that makes crypto suitable for adoption by large organisations outside the crypto space.
Qtum is Proof of Stake (PoS)-based and uses a Decentralised Governance Protocol (DGP) that allows for blockchain settings to be modified through smart contracts. For example, Qtum can increase block size on its chain without a hard fork.
Its native token is QTM. It can be used to pay fees on the platform and also offers voting rights on the platform’s development to holders.
Qtum — pronounced ‘quantum’ — was founded in 2016 by the Qtum Foundation, a non-profit organisation based in Singapore that develops software. Its founding members are Patrick Dai, Jordan Earls, and Neil Mahl. The initial coin offering (ICO) was held in March 2017 and raised US$15 million by selling 51% of the 100 million QTM total supply. The remainder of the supply was distributed among investors, the founding team, and allocated to business development. The Qtum platform went live in October 2017.
Qtum’s goal is to combine the best of both Bitcoin and Ethereum to create a secure exchange for business-focused, decentralised applications (dapps) that can be utilised by industries like finance and social networking.
To achieve its vision, the Qtum Foundation modified Bitcoin’s code by adding Ethereum-style smart contract features to it. This allows users and creators to write and run smart contract applications on the Qtum ecosystem.
One might wonder now how this differs from Ethereum itself. The answer is Qtum’s transaction model is an exact copy of Bitcoin’s UTXO transaction model. On top of this, the team added an additional layer that operates in a similar fashion to the Ethereum virtual machine (EVM), which executes smart contracts and allows for decentralised applications.
Qtum has built its own virtual machine. This allows developers to write and execute programmes across Qtum’s distributed network of computers. Its global nodes are distributed on six continents, and the number of Qtum nodes is only exceeded by Bitcoin and Ethereum.
Besides borrowing from the two biggest blockchains in the space, Qtum also added its own touch. The first is what Qtum calls the Account Abstraction Layer (AAL), the tech that allows for smart contracts and the UTXO model to interact.
Second, Qtum runs on a PoS consensus model rather than the Proof of Work (PoW) model used by Bitcoin and the interim solution currently still used by Ethereum. This makes it more energy-efficient to mine new QTM coins. Bitcoin’s PoW approach consumes more electricity annually than entire countries, which has resulted in backlash from a sustainability perspective. Qtum’s PoS process is the more modern solution and results in reduced electricity consumption.
Qtum offers a multi-wallet ecosystem for users across iOS, Android, Windows, Mac, Linux, hardware wallet, web, and other clients.
The QTM token can be used to pay fees in the network and it also gives voting rights to holders through its on-chain governance system, meaning that those who hold QTM can influence the direction of the platform’s development.
Invest in Qtum