Wallet Balances
Last updated
Last updated
Wallets that hold a balance of X amount for a given asset.
The sum of the supply being held by all wallets whose balance was at least X% of an asset's current supply at the end of the measurement interval. For example, if an asset's current supply is 100 tokens in total, SplyWalBal1in1B
would provide the sum of the balances held by all wallets holding at least 0.0000001 units of the token. Wallets represent groups of addresses that we estimate are owned by the same entity. They provide a better proxy for user behavior since users often own more than one blockchain address.
The sum of the supply being held by all wallets whose balance was at least X native units. For example, if an asset's current supply is 21M tokens in total, this metric would provide the sum of the balances held by all wallets with a balance greater or equal to X units. Wallets represent groups of addresses that we estimate are owned by the same entity. They provide a better proxy for user behavior since users often own more than one blockchain address.
Native units represent a cryptoasset's monetary unit. For example, the native unit of Bitcoin is BTC, or bitcoins_._
In order to group addresses together, we employ a clustering methodology based on well-established industry standards.
Only native units are taken into account. We do not account for token balances that may be held by the same entity. For example, this metric for ETH would not account for any ERC20 token balance that may be held by the very same address.
This metric is not available for assets that have full privacy, like Monero, Grin.
For assets that have opt-in privacy features, like ZCash, it only takes the non-private balances into account.
Released in version 5.1 of Network Data Pro
The sum of the supply being held by all wallets whose balance is equivalent to at least X dollar when priced using the Coin Metrics Reference Rate. Wallets represent groups of addresses that we estimate are owned by the same entity. They provide a better proxy for user behavior since users often own more than one blockchain address.
In order to compute this metric, we multiply the balance of all wallets that we have identified in the blockchain by the price of the token. All wallets with a value greater or equal to the USD value of the threshold above are summed and depicted in units of USD.
Wallets represent groups of addresses that we estimate are owned by the same entity. In order to group addresses together, we employ a clustering methodology based on well-established industry standards.
Only native units are taken into account. We do not account for token balances that may be held by the same entity. For example, this metric for ETH would not account for any ERC20 USD balance that may be owned by the very same address.
This metric is not available for assets that have full privacy, like Monero, Grin.
For assets that have opt-in privacy features, like ZCash, it only takes the non-private balances into account.
Released in version 5.1 of Network Data Pro
The sum count of unique wallets with a balance greater than 0 that can be observed in the blockchain. Wallets represent groups of addresses that we estimate are owned by the same entity. They provide a better proxy for user behavior since users often own more than one blockchain address.
Wallets represent groups of addresses that we estimate are owned by the same entity. In order to group addresses together, we employ a clustering methodology based on well-established industry standards.
This metric is not available for assets that have full privacy, like Monero and Grin. For assets that have opt-in privacy features, like ZCash, it only takes the non-private activities into account.
Released in version 5.1 of Network Data Pro
Address Balances can be accessed using these endpoints:
timeseries/asset-metrics
and by passing in the metric IDs SplyWalBal1in1B
, etc. in the metrics
parameter.