The MON token of Monad, a highly anticipated EVM-compatible Layer-1 blockchain, began trading on November 24, 2025, with lackluster performance. Shortly after listing, MON traded around $0.02417, below its public sale price of $0.025, while 24-hour volume hovered near $50 million — a relatively modest figure for a new Layer-1 token launch.
Key Observations
The public sale, which offered 7.5% of total supply at a fixed $0.025, took several days longer than recent comparable launches (such as Plasma) to reach its $187.5 million target, signaling softer-than-expected demand.
Early trading reflected limited enthusiasm, with the token quickly dipping under the sale price and struggling to generate sustained buying interest.
Distribution concerns contributed to the muted reception. The Monad team retained a 27% allocation (with a one-year cliff and multi-year vesting), a figure that some market participants viewed as high compared with newer community-focused launches.
Despite the project’s strong technical reputation — 10,000 TPS claims, parallel execution, and backing from Paradigm and other top-tier funds — the combination of a drawn-out sale, below-sale-price debut, and allocation criticism weighed on initial sentiment.
Monad’s mainnet is scheduled to go live imminently, and supporters argue that on-chain performance and ecosystem growth will ultimately determine long-term value. For now, however, MON has stumbled out of the gate, opening well below the expectations set by its $3 billion pre-launch valuation and the rapid sell-outs of recent competing Layer-1 tokens.
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Monad’s MON Token Opens Weakly After Prolonged Public Sale
The MON token of Monad, a highly anticipated EVM-compatible Layer-1 blockchain, began trading on November 24, 2025, with lackluster performance. Shortly after listing, MON traded around $0.02417, below its public sale price of $0.025, while 24-hour volume hovered near $50 million — a relatively modest figure for a new Layer-1 token launch.
Key Observations
Despite the project’s strong technical reputation — 10,000 TPS claims, parallel execution, and backing from Paradigm and other top-tier funds — the combination of a drawn-out sale, below-sale-price debut, and allocation criticism weighed on initial sentiment.
Monad’s mainnet is scheduled to go live imminently, and supporters argue that on-chain performance and ecosystem growth will ultimately determine long-term value. For now, however, MON has stumbled out of the gate, opening well below the expectations set by its $3 billion pre-launch valuation and the rapid sell-outs of recent competing Layer-1 tokens.