What Sign is

Sign is a token issued on Ethereum, currently ranked 566th by market capitalization among the assets we track. Sign is a contract-deployed token: it borrows the security of its host chain and lives or dies on its own adoption. With limited category data available, the honest read leans on observable market behavior.

Sign (SIGN) is a digital asset that facilitates seamless communication and interaction within decentralized platforms through smart contracts and tokenization. It aims to enhance user engagement and incentivize participation in various decentralized applications.

How to approach Sign

Sign sits on top of an established chain, so the base-layer security is a given; the open question is real adoption. Market data and primary sources beat assumptions here.

Background & fundamentals

Sign is issued as a token on Ethereum rather than running its own base-layer blockchain. The project publishes a whitepaper documenting its original design, which is worth reading before sizing any position in SIGN. In sector terms it is most often filed under Ethereum (ETH) Token (ERC-20), Zero Knowledge (ZK), and Binance Coin (BNB) Token (BEP-20).

Where Sign sits in the market

Trading around $0.00814200, Sign carries a market capitalization of $10.99M. Around $3.69M changes hands across exchanges in a typical 24-hour window. That is a turnover of about 33.53% of the float — unusually high, the kind of churn that accompanies major news or speculative spikes.

Almost the entire SIGN supply is already in circulation (~100.0% of the 10B cap), so future dilution is effectively off the table. SIGN remains -94% beneath its all-time high of $0.1325, the kind of gap that historically takes a full cycle or a fresh catalyst to close.

What the price history shows

Across timeframes, SIGN shows 24-hour -3.22%, 7-day -7.58%. SIGN is currently trading near the bottom of its 365-day range (around the 0th percentile of recent closes).

Volatility profile

Recent action puts Sign in the Moderate-volatility band — it shows the kind of price movement common in mid-cap crypto assets — meaningful but not unusual.

How to evaluate Sign

The honest checklist for SIGN is short:

  • Liquidity — how deep and reliable trading in SIGN actually is, since thin books amplify both moves.
  • Supply dynamics — circulating versus maximum supply and the dilution that implies.
  • Primary sources — what the project itself documents, because standardized sector data on SIGN is limited.

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.