What Nesa is
Nesa (NES) is a proof-of-stake Layer-1 blockchain, currently ranked 533rd by market capitalization among the assets we track. Nesa is a Layer-1 smart-contract platform secured by proof-of-stake: validators lock NES as collateral, and the protocol slashes anyone who misbehaves. The token is simultaneously gas, collateral, and a claim on staking yield.
How consensus and the token economy connect
Staking ties the token's value to network security: more NES bonded means a costlier attack, and stakers are paid for taking that role. Unstaking queues and slashing parameters shape how liquid that capital really is.
Background & fundamentals
In sector terms it is most often filed under Binance Coin (BNB) Token (BEP-20), Ethereum (ETH) Token (ERC-20), and Layer 1 (L1).
Where Nesa sits in the market
With NES near $0.1781, Nesa carries a market capitalization of $25.20M. Around $16.41M changes hands across exchanges in a typical 24-hour window. That is a turnover of about 65.12% of the float — unusually high, the kind of churn that accompanies major news or speculative spikes.
Nesa carries no fixed maximum supply; issuance follows a programmatic schedule rather than a hard cap. NES trades about -13% below its all-time high of $0.2058, within reach of prior peaks.
What the price history shows
Recent moves read 24-hour -0.48%.
Volatility profile
Recent action puts Nesa in the Low-volatility band — it has been relatively stable, with moves typical of large-cap, mature assets.
How to evaluate Nesa
For an asset of this type, three lenses matter most:
- Real usage — active addresses, fees paid, and total value locked — does on-chain demand justify the valuation?
- Staking economics — the share of NES staked, the yield, and unlock/queue dynamics that govern liquid supply.
- Ecosystem depth — how many applications and how much liquidity have chosen Nesa over competing Layer-1s.
This page pulls live market data, on-chain stats where available, exchange-by-exchange volume, and our forecast model into one view so you can work through those questions in a single place. None of it is investment advice — it is a structured starting point for your own research.