What Render Token coordinates

Render Token (RNDR) is an AI / DePIN infrastructure token, currently ranked 49th by market capitalization among the assets we track. Rather than a payments coin, Render Token is the settlement and incentive layer for a distributed infrastructure network. The token's job is to bootstrap supply of a useful resource and pay for its consumption.

How the network bootstraps supply and demand

The durable version of Render Token is one where actual usage — inference, storage, connectivity — generates revenue that exceeds the incentives paid out. Until then, much of the demand for the token is subsidy-driven.

Where Render Token sits in the market

Trading around $2.37, Render Token carries a market capitalization of $1.23B. Around $1.14M changes hands across exchanges in a typical 24-hour window. That is a turnover of about 0.09% of the float — on the quieter side, which can mean thinner liquidity for large orders.

What the price history shows

Across timeframes, RNDR shows 24-hour +18.19%, 7-day +33.27%, 30-day +17.79%, 1-year -47.08%. Across roughly the last 365 days of daily candles, RNDR endured a peak-to-trough drawdown of about 55% before stabilizing.

Volatility profile

Recent action puts Render Token in the Extreme-volatility band — it is in a high-volatility regime — these are the conditions where outsized gains and losses both become more likely. Over the last 30 days the move totals +17.79%, a useful input for stop placement and position sizing.

How to evaluate an AI/DePIN token like Render Token

The honest checklist for RNDR is short:

  • Real demand — paying usage of the network's resource, not just provider rewards funded by RNDR emissions.
  • Supply growth — how much real-world or compute capacity the network has actually brought online.
  • Token economics — whether RNDR demand can outgrow the incentives the protocol pays to bootstrap it.

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.