What Resupply USD is designed to do
Resupply USD (REUSD) is a fiat-backed stablecoin, currently ranked 322nd by market capitalization among the assets we track. Resupply USD is a fiat-backed stablecoin: each token is meant to be redeemable for a reference currency held in reserve, so its job is to stay flat, not to appreciate. It is plumbing for the crypto economy rather than a bet on price.
Resupply USD (REUSD) is a stablecoin designed to provide a reliable and secure digital currency that maintains a peg to the US dollar. It aims to facilitate seamless transactions within the cryptocurrency ecosystem.
How the peg is meant to hold
The mechanism is straightforward in theory — one token, one unit of reserve — but it depends entirely on the issuer actually holding and honoring those reserves. Attestation quality is therefore the core risk.
Background & fundamentals
In sector terms it is most often filed under Recently Added, Ethereum (ETH) Token (ERC-20), and Stablecoin.
Where Resupply USD sits in the market
At $0.9944, Resupply USD carries a market capitalization of $59.02M. Around $6.05K changes hands across exchanges in a typical 24-hour window. That is a turnover of about 0.01% of the float — on the quieter side, which can mean thinner liquidity for large orders.
Resupply USD carries no fixed maximum supply; issuance follows a programmatic schedule rather than a hard cap. At the current $0.9944, REUSD sits essentially at its record high — the riskier end of the range for fresh entries.
What the price history shows
Recent moves read 24-hour -0.03%, 7-day +0.19%.
Volatility profile
Recent action puts Resupply USD in the Low-volatility band — it has been relatively stable, with moves typical of large-cap, mature assets.
How to evaluate a stablecoin like Resupply USD
A grounded read on REUSD comes down to three questions:
- Reserve quality — what backs REUSD — cash and short Treasuries are safer than commercial paper or crypto collateral — and who attests to it.
- Redemption access — whether holders can actually redeem at par, and how quickly, under stress.
- Regulatory standing — the issuer's jurisdiction and licensing, which increasingly determines which stablecoins survive at scale.
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.