Cetus Token price

in USD
$0.0383
-- (--)
USD
Last updated on --.
Market cap
$33.00M
Circulating supply
859.06M / 1B
All-time high
$0.49896
24h volume
$13.02M
CETUSCETUS
USDUSD

About Cetus Token

CETUS, or Cetus Token, is the native cryptocurrency of the Cetus Protocol, a leading decentralized exchange (DEX) and liquidity aggregator built on the Sui Network. Designed to optimize trading and liquidity management, CETUS plays a vital role in powering seamless swaps, yield farming, and liquidity provision within its ecosystem. Users can stake CETUS to earn rewards, participate in governance decisions, and access advanced DeFi tools. By focusing on efficiency, transparency, and user-friendly features, Cetus Protocol has become a cornerstone of the Sui DeFi ecosystem, making CETUS a key asset for those looking to explore decentralized finance. Whether you're a trader, liquidity provider, or DeFi enthusiast, CETUS offers a gateway to a dynamic and growing ecosystem.
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Disclosures

Cetus Token risk

This material is for informational purposes only and is not exhaustive of all risks associated with trading Cetus Token. All crypto assets are risky, there are general risks in investing in Cetus Token. These include volatility risk, liquidity risk, demand risk, forking risk, cryptography risk, regulatory risk, concentration risk & cyber security risk. This is not intended to provide (i) investment advice or an investment recommendation; (ii) an offer or solicitation to buy, sell, or hold crypto assets; or (iii) financial, accounting, legal or tax advice. Profits may be subject to capital gains tax. You should carefully consider whether trading or holding crypto assets is suitable for you in light of your financial situation. Please review the Risk Summary for additional information.

Investment Risk

The performance of most crypto assets can be highly volatile, with their value dropping as quickly as it can rise. You should be prepared to lose all the money you invest in crypto assets.

Lack of Protections

Crypto assets are largely unregulated and neither the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) nor the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) will protect you in the event something goes wrong with your crypto asset investments.

Liquidity Risk

There is no guarantee that investments in crypto assets can be easily sold at any given time.

Complexity

Investments in crypto assets can be complex, making it difficult to understand the risks associated with the investment. You should do your own research before investing. If something sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

Concentration Risk

Don't put all your eggs in one basket. Putting all your money into a single type of investment is risky. Spreading your money across different investments makes you less dependent on anyone to do well. A good rule of thumb is not to invest more than 10% of your money in high-risk investments.

Five questions to ask yourself

  1. Am I comfortable with the level of risk? Can I afford to lose my money?
  2. Do I understand the investment and could I get my money out easily?
  3. Are my investments regulated?
  4. Am I protected if the investment provider or my adviser goes out of business?
  5. Should I get financial advice?

DeFi tokens

Decentralised Finance ("DeFi") tokens are crypto assets built on decentralised blockchain technology for financial applications or protocols. Risks linked to DeFi tokens include:

Enterprise Risk

Interactions between multiple DeFi protocols create a situation where a vulnerability or breakdown in one protocol can trigger a cascading effect, affecting other interconnected platforms.

Technology Risk

DeFi protocols frequently depend on external data sources or oracles, and any tampering or inaccuracies in these data streams can result in a lack of trust and reliability in the protocols.

Regulatory Risk

Governments and regulatory bodies around the world can introduce new regulations or ban certain aspects of the cryptocurrency market, affecting its legality and viability, which could affect token liquidity and/or value.

Legal Risk

Certain tokens may be used for operating a decentralised exchange platform which may contain additional risks:

  1. The platform may allow users to participate who have not been vetted or verified and therefore expose the possibility that users are interacting with sanctioned entities.
  2. The platform may be accessible in jurisdictions where some or all the exchange activity should be regulated. If a local regulator deemed the platform activity to be in breach of local regulation, they may request cessation or termination of the service which could affect token liquidity and/or value.

Market Risk

Given their novelty, the evolving technology involved and lack traditional asset structure, valuing crypto assets can be very difficult or impossible. This means valuations are determined by demand that is at risk of manipulation in various ways.

Cetus Token’s price performance

Past year
-77.67%
$0.17
3 months
-62.09%
$0.10
30 days
-51.41%
$0.08
7 days
-24.30%
$0.05
53%
Buying
Updated hourly.
More people are buying CETUS than selling on OKX

Cetus Token on socials

Shayan (Devconnect era 🇦🇷)
Shayan (Devconnect era 🇦🇷)
I got a bunch of questions regarding this tweet asking about the Cetus hack and how the Balancer hack compares to it. Both hacks involved overflow-related issues; Balancer had rounding errors, while Cetus had a bitshift overflow. But you're probably thinking, "Isn't Move supposed to be safer? What's the point in using Move if similar issues still happen?" Totally valid questions. The biggest difference between Move and Solidity is that Move helps prevent you from accidentally shooting yourself in the foot with built-in u128/u256 overflow aborts, but it doesn't guarantee protection if you intentionally write unsafe code. If you look at this one line in Cetus' math library, you might be thinking what on earth is this: It was a bitshift operation (<< 192) in their "safe" math library, which unfortunately turned out to be anything but safe, leading to the infamous $223M drain. This was done likely a hacky gas optimization. If they had used standard u128 multiplication with overflow checks, this wouldn’t have happened. On high-performance chains like Sui, where the average transaction cost is well under one cent, the juice just is not worth the squeeze. In essence, no money has been lost in Move hacks when following recommended Move practices.
Shayan (Devconnect era 🇦🇷)
Shayan (Devconnect era 🇦🇷)
First and foremost, my greatest sympathies to the @Balancer team as well as everyone affected by this exploit. It's always a rough day when there's a significant DeFi hack like this, let alone from an OG protocol. More than the dollar cost of the stolen funds, this genuinely hurts all of crypto and DeFi's image as a whole and sets our industry back several months. Fact of the matter is that Solidity is just too insecure a language for it to truly be the one that hosts the future of finance. Solidity has just too large of a surface area that makes it prone to hacks, with devs relying on manual checks for everything from access controls to precise math, and it is exactly why asset-first languages like Move were invented to begin with. After doing a bit of digging, this was how Balancer was hacked: Attackers exploited rounding errors in stable pool swaps to distort the pool's invariant, a key math constant that represents balanced liquidity. They started with flash-loaned swaps of BPT (Balancer Pool Tokens) for an underlying asset like cbETH, pushing balances to exact rounding boundaries (e.g., scaled to 9). Then, they swapped between assets like wstETH to cbETH with crafted amounts (e.g., ~8.918 rounded down to 8 due to fixed-point scaling), underestimating reserve changes and artificially deflating the invariant (D). This tanked the BPT price (D / totalSupply), letting attackers reverse-swap to mint excess BPT cheaply, burn it to withdraw underlying assets at "normal" rates, and pocket the difference, essentially stealing from liquidity providers. Profits accumulated in the Vault's internal balances and were cashed out via manageUserBalance with WITHDRAW_INTERNAL, no direct auth bypass needed since the math flaw subsidized the theft. It's a precision loss in Solidity's manual fixed-point libraries that cascades into massive drains. The way Move would have bypassed this hack altogether is by baking in safety at the core: Assets are treated as resources with linear types that enforce strict conservation (no unintended dupes, drops, or losses), and math uses exact u64/u128 integers with built-in overflow aborts, no floats, no exploitable rounding slips in complex calculations. In a Move-based DEX, swap functions would atomically check and update invariants via the VM, aborting on any imbalance, such as: public entry fun swap(pool: &mut LiquidityPool, in: Coin, out_amt: u64): Coin { assert!(coin::value(&in) >= calculate_required_in(pool, out_amt), E_INSUFFICIENT_INPUT); coin::merge(&mut pool.coin_x_reserve, in); let out = coin::extract(&mut pool.coin_y_reserve, out_amt); assert!(check_invariant(pool), E_INVARIANT_VIOLATION); out } Plus, atomic transactions kill reentrancy risks. This is why Move ecosystems have far fewer exploits compared to the EVM. It's time for DeFi builders to embrace languages like Move that prioritize security from the ground up, so we can finally build a resilient financial future without preventable setbacks like this.
cmScanner_PSAR
cmScanner_PSAR
Pairs with PSAR direction changed in the last 1h $DASH $SCRT $TURTLE $ACX $AERO $YGG $NOM $SAND $ZKJ $QUICK $PIXEL $TOSHI $DOLO $CETUS $CAKE $DEGEN $ACH $1INCH $RED $ORCA
juzy
juzy
remember the $200M cetus hack when sui validators recovered most of the stolen funds and other chains mocked sui because cOdE iS iMmUtAbLe LaW? and now everyone is doing the same (understandably)
Haseeb >|<
Haseeb >|<
Fascinating how different chains responded differently to the $128M @Balancer hack. Berachain had validators halt the network (Balancer very tightly integrated into their ecosystem). Polygon validators censoring hacker's transactions to freeze them in place. Sonic added functionality to freeze & 0 out hacker's account. TBH, I think these are mostly good answers. Smaller ecosystems should prioritize safety and community protection over "code is law."

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Cetus Token FAQ

Currently, one Cetus Token is worth $0.0383. For answers and insight into Cetus Token's price action, you're in the right place. Explore the latest Cetus Token charts and trade responsibly with OKX.
Cryptocurrencies, such as Cetus Token, are digital assets that operate on a public ledger called blockchains. Learn more about coins and tokens offered on OKX and their different attributes, which includes live prices and real-time charts.
Thanks to the 2008 financial crisis, interest in decentralized finance boomed. Bitcoin offered a novel solution by being a secure digital asset on a decentralized network. Since then, many other tokens such as Cetus Token have been created as well.
Check out our Cetus Token price prediction page to forecast future prices and determine your price targets.

Dive deeper into Cetus Token

Cetus is a DEX and concentrated liquidity protocol, crafted on the Sui and Aptos blockchains.

Disclaimer

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Market cap
$33.00M
Circulating supply
859.06M / 1B
All-time high
$0.49896
24h volume
$13.02M
CETUSCETUS
USDUSD
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