
Market Cap
$117.72M
24h Volume
$3.34M
Circulating
117.78M CASH
All-Time High
$1.06
Market Cap
$117.72M
Volume (24h)
$3.34M
Circulating Supply
117.78M CASH
Max Supply
N/A
1 CASH = $1.00
| All-Time High | $1.06 (November 15, 2025) |
| All-Time Low | $0.721504 (March 23, 2026) |
| Exchange | Pair | Price | Trust | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manifest | CASHX9KJUSTYFTLFWGVEVF59SGEG9SH5FFCNZMVPCASH/EPJFWDD5AUFQSSQEM2QN1XZYBAPC8G4WEGGKZWYTDT1V | $0.999656 | Trade → | |
| Raydium (CLMM) | 3B8X44FLF9OOXAUM3HHSGJPMVS6RZZ3PPOGNGAHC3UU7/CASHX9KJUSTYFTLFWGVEVF59SGEG9SH5FFCNZMVPCASH | $1.04 | Trade → | |
| Orca | CASHX9KJUSTYFTLFWGVEVF59SGEG9SH5FFCNZMVPCASH/EPJFWDD5AUFQSSQEM2QN1XZYBAPC8G4WEGGKZWYTDT1V |
CASH (CASH) is a dollar-pegged stablecoin that aims to trade at $1 per token. It belongs to the broader category of fiat-backed crypto assets, where each unit is intended to represent a claim on an underlying reserve denominated in US dollars. The token trades under the CoinGecko identifier cash-4, a suffix that distinguishes it from other historical assets that have used the same ticker.
Like other stablecoins, CASH is not a speculative asset in the same sense as Bitcoin or Ethereum. Holders are not betting on price appreciation; they are using a tokenized dollar to settle on-chain trades, move value between exchanges, and hold purchasing power without volatility. The relevant questions for CASH are not about price targets but about reserve quality, redemption mechanics, and counterparty trust.
The CASH price targets $1 by design. Live data on this page is aggregated from a multi-venue market feed and refreshes every 60 seconds. Small deviations above or below the peg are normal in stablecoin markets and reflect real-time supply, demand, and liquidity conditions on the venues where CASH trades.
What moves a stablecoin like CASH around its peg:
The figures in the price card above are live. The deeper analysis for any stablecoin focuses on the integrity of the peg mechanism rather than the dollar-cents of intra-day movement.
Fiat-backed stablecoins like CASH rely on a simple but trust-heavy arrangement. The issuer accepts US dollar deposits, mints tokens at a 1:1 ratio, and stands ready to redeem tokens for dollars on demand. As long as that two-way window is open and the reserves behind it are real and liquid, arbitrageurs keep the secondary-market price tightly anchored to $1.
The mechanics generally look like this:
▼ +5.53% from ATH
| $0.999638 |
| Trade → |
| Orca | CASHX9KJUSTYFTLFWGVEVF59SGEG9SH5FFCNZMVPCASH/SO11111111111111111111111111111111111111112 | $0.011783 | Trade → |
| Kraken | CASH/USD | $0.9994 | Trade → |
This loop only works if redemptions are honored quickly and reserves are held in liquid, high-quality assets. Any friction in that process turns a stablecoin into a soft-pegged asset that can drift further from $1 during stress.
Like most modern stablecoins, CASH is designed to circulate on multiple blockchains. The choice of network changes how the asset behaves in practice, even though one CASH on any chain is intended to redeem for the same dollar amount.
CASH on different chains is not interchangeable on-chain. A token sent to an address on the wrong network is usually unrecoverable, so always confirm the network before withdrawing.
CASH sits in a crowded market. The dollar-stablecoin category is dominated by a few large issuers, with a long tail of smaller projects that compete on transparency, regulatory positioning, or chain-specific use cases.
Most active users hold a primary stablecoin for liquidity and a secondary one to diversify issuer risk. Treating any single stablecoin as a riskless dollar substitute is a common mistake.
Acquiring CASH follows the same flow as any major stablecoin.
For storage, the same wallet that holds your other crypto on a given chain will normally hold CASH on that chain. Always test with a small transfer before moving a significant balance.
A stablecoin forecast is fundamentally different from a forecast for a volatile asset. The base case is that CASH trades at $1 the vast majority of the time. The interesting questions are about the tails, not the mean.
For a structured view of multi-horizon projections, see the dedicated CASH price forecast page, which lays out short, medium, and long-term scenarios alongside the on-chain and macro variables that drive them.
CASH is not riskless. The main risks are different from those of volatile cryptocurrencies and are easy to underestimate.
This page is information, not financial advice. Stablecoin holdings carry counterparty and regulatory risk that is easy to underestimate.
At the time of writing, CASH (CASH) trades at $0.999556, with a 24-hour trading volume of $3.34M and a total market capitalization of $117.72M. The asset is currently ranked #262 among all tracked cryptocurrencies by market cap.
Over the last 24 hours, the CASH price has dropped +0.05%. On the seven-day chart, CASH has climbed +0.00%, showing mixed signals across the short and medium term. Short-term price swings are often amplified by liquidity conditions, news flow, and derivatives positioning, so traders should confirm signals across multiple indicators before acting.
CASH's all-time high of $1.06 was set on November 15, 2025. The current market price is +5.53% below that historical peak. Distance from the all-time high is a common reference point when evaluating long-term recoveries and identifying macro support or resistance levels.
Buying CASH (CASH) is straightforward once you know which exchange to use and which trading pair offers the best liquidity. The steps below describe the typical flow used by most investors today.
You can also use the built-in CASH converter above to estimate exactly how much CASH you would receive for a given amount in USD before placing an order.
Whether CASH is a good investment depends on your goals, time horizon, and tolerance for volatility. Like all cryptocurrencies, CASH carries significant market risk — prices can rise or fall sharply in a single day, and past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns.
This page provides data and analysis for educational purposes only. It is not financial advice. Always do your own research, diversify, and never invest more than you can afford to lose.