
PYUSD
PayPal USD price
$1.0002
+$0.00080027
(+0.08%)
Price change for the last 24 hours

PayPal USD market info
Market cap
Market cap is calculated by multiplying the circulating supply of a coin with its latest price.
Market cap = Circulating supply × Last price
Market cap = Circulating supply × Last price
Circulating supply
Total amount of a coin that is publicly available on the market.
Market cap ranking
A coin's ranking in terms of market cap value.
All-time high
Highest price a coin has reached in its trading history.
All-time low
Lowest price a coin has reached in its trading history.
Market cap
$981.28M
Circulating supply
981,378,427 PYUSD
100.00% of
981,378,427 PYUSD
Market cap ranking
50
Audits
CertiK
Last audit: --
24h high
$1.0003
24h low
$0.99894
All-time high
$4.9999
-80.00% (-$3.9997)
Last updated: Oct 5, 2024, (UTC+8)
All-time low
$0.98600
+1.44% (+$0.014240)
Last updated: Oct 5, 2024, (UTC+8)
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PayPal USD Feed
The following content is sourced from .

DeThings
🔵Agora CEO questions Anchorage's rating report that lists AUSD as a high-risk asset
DeThings June 27 - According to The Block, Agora CEO Nick van Eck has questioned the "Stablecoin Security Rating Matrix" released by Anchorage Digital, which categorizes AUSD as a high-risk asset. Van Eck accused Anchorage of bias in its ratings due to its business partnerships with stablecoin companies like Paxos. Anchorage previously delisted AUSD and USDC citing "structural risks," but van Eck claimed this was an act of retaliation because Agora refused to use its fee-based service products. Anchorage responded that the rating is entirely based on publicly disclosed information, with assessment dimensions including reserve composition, banking partners, and regulatory compliance. In their ratings, PayPal's PYUSD and Paxos' USDP topped the list, followed by USDT, RLUSD, and others. Agora disclosed that its reserves are held by State Street Bank, with Van Eck serving as the investment manager.
Show original4.86K
0

🍊Chen Fang
for the record @BitGo is not dropping $USDC support
props to @jerallaire for building a great product and a great company

Jan van Eck
If you need a laugh, check out this “safety” matrix before @Anchorage pulls it down.
According to the matrix, Circle’s USDC (world’s second largest stablecoin) and $AUSD (backed 100% by treasuries) have reserve issues.
@jerallaire
Oh, and by the way, AUSD’s reserve manager— @vaneck_us —is regulated by umpteen different regulators.
5.03K
5

Smokey
I stand with Nick van Eck
There should be no place in our industry for dirty pay to play tricks like this

Nick van Eck
Pay to Play
Much has been made about how parts of the crypto industry operate under a “pay to play” model. This is extractive, harms consumers, and creates opacity in markets. Seemingly, that “pay to play” nature has now permeated the regulated intersection of stablecoins and custodians.
Last week an executive from @Anchorage reached out to me offering their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I declined, stating we are in deep conversations on our own licensure, have been operating compliantly since inception and have deep expertise in regulated financial markets due to our team’s career experience and uniquely deep relationship with State Street and VanEck.
Following that conversation, Anchorage published a piece, “Anchorage Digital Publishes Stablecoin Safety Matrix, Enables Auto-Conversions to Safe Stablecoins.” In it, they state that Anchorage is delisting both USDC and AUSD for safety concerns, while publishing easily verifiable and known factual inaccuracies. Factual inaccuracies that they have known since our initial listing by Anchorage, corrected again by VanEck representatives before publication of the report, and then were still published and have yet to be retracted. “Specifically, we identified elevated concentration risks associated with their issuer structures—something we believe institutions should carefully evaluate.” Ironically, VanEck has served hundreds more institutional clientele for decades longer than Anchorage has existed. As of writing, VanEck manages more money than the aggregate asset value of all stablecoins in existence, with the exception of Tether.
In this report, Anchorage failed to disclose their economic relationship with Paxos, the issuer of 3 of their top 4 rated stablecoins. Partners of Paxos (i.e., Anchorage) earn a revenue share and basis point fee on mints of their stablecoins, and they have a unique preferred agreement where they get ALL of the revenue from those stables if they sit on the Anchorage platform. That relationship is clearly pertinent to potential customers who might read this report. The same Anchorage executive who reached out to me confirmed two companies were planning to use their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I surmise they are deemed “safe” stablecoins.
If Anchorage had just delisted USDC and AUSD to prioritize the stablecoins that they have an economic interest in, I would understand it as a business decision. Private businesses can and should act in their own interests.
But attempting to delegitimize AUSD and USDC for “security concerns,” while knowingly publishing false information, is unserious and bizarre.
So let me reiterate and categorize the errors about AUSD: State Street is the cash custodian and fund administrator of The Agora Reserve Fund. VanEck, a $100B+ asset manager, is the investment manager of The Agora Reserve Fund. Anchorage has known this since initial listing and that was confirmed again by VanEck representatives before publication. By their own matrix AUSD should receive a score similar to or better than USDG if the framework was applied uniformly.
I’m sure that Circle, the issuer of USDC, also has similar inaccuracies to correct and claiming that USDC is less safe than USDT, USDG, PYUSD, and USDP clearly belies their true intentions. Circle is a publicly traded company on the NYSE with many years of audited financials and transparency.
As the pioneers of the open-partner framework, Agora is constantly expanding our network of support. At Agora, we endeavor to always be the most transparent, customer-driven, programmable money that serves a global customer base. We are underdogs, relish the fight, and will never pay to play.
Nick van Eck
CEO and Co-Founder of Agora
5.85K
23

Mikko Ohtamaa
Now we don't get only chain drama, shitcoin drama, but we also get stablecoin drama.
🍿

Nick van Eck
Pay to Play
Much has been made about how parts of the crypto industry operate under a “pay to play” model. This is extractive, harms consumers, and creates opacity in markets. Seemingly, that “pay to play” nature has now permeated the regulated intersection of stablecoins and custodians.
Last week an executive from @Anchorage reached out to me offering their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I declined, stating we are in deep conversations on our own licensure, have been operating compliantly since inception and have deep expertise in regulated financial markets due to our team’s career experience and uniquely deep relationship with State Street and VanEck.
Following that conversation, Anchorage published a piece, “Anchorage Digital Publishes Stablecoin Safety Matrix, Enables Auto-Conversions to Safe Stablecoins.” In it, they state that Anchorage is delisting both USDC and AUSD for safety concerns, while publishing easily verifiable and known factual inaccuracies. Factual inaccuracies that they have known since our initial listing by Anchorage, corrected again by VanEck representatives before publication of the report, and then were still published and have yet to be retracted. “Specifically, we identified elevated concentration risks associated with their issuer structures—something we believe institutions should carefully evaluate.” Ironically, VanEck has served hundreds more institutional clientele for decades longer than Anchorage has existed. As of writing, VanEck manages more money than the aggregate asset value of all stablecoins in existence, with the exception of Tether.
In this report, Anchorage failed to disclose their economic relationship with Paxos, the issuer of 3 of their top 4 rated stablecoins. Partners of Paxos (i.e., Anchorage) earn a revenue share and basis point fee on mints of their stablecoins, and they have a unique preferred agreement where they get ALL of the revenue from those stables if they sit on the Anchorage platform. That relationship is clearly pertinent to potential customers who might read this report. The same Anchorage executive who reached out to me confirmed two companies were planning to use their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I surmise they are deemed “safe” stablecoins.
If Anchorage had just delisted USDC and AUSD to prioritize the stablecoins that they have an economic interest in, I would understand it as a business decision. Private businesses can and should act in their own interests.
But attempting to delegitimize AUSD and USDC for “security concerns,” while knowingly publishing false information, is unserious and bizarre.
So let me reiterate and categorize the errors about AUSD: State Street is the cash custodian and fund administrator of The Agora Reserve Fund. VanEck, a $100B+ asset manager, is the investment manager of The Agora Reserve Fund. Anchorage has known this since initial listing and that was confirmed again by VanEck representatives before publication. By their own matrix AUSD should receive a score similar to or better than USDG if the framework was applied uniformly.
I’m sure that Circle, the issuer of USDC, also has similar inaccuracies to correct and claiming that USDC is less safe than USDT, USDG, PYUSD, and USDP clearly belies their true intentions. Circle is a publicly traded company on the NYSE with many years of audited financials and transparency.
As the pioneers of the open-partner framework, Agora is constantly expanding our network of support. At Agora, we endeavor to always be the most transparent, customer-driven, programmable money that serves a global customer base. We are underdogs, relish the fight, and will never pay to play.
Nick van Eck
CEO and Co-Founder of Agora
4.83K
4

davidev.eth 💜
We stand with @Nick_van_Eck and @withAUSD.
They have been a top notch partner when building stable coin based product and I cannot more highly recommend reaching out to their team if you are a builder.

Nick van Eck
Pay to Play
Much has been made about how parts of the crypto industry operate under a “pay to play” model. This is extractive, harms consumers, and creates opacity in markets. Seemingly, that “pay to play” nature has now permeated the regulated intersection of stablecoins and custodians.
Last week an executive from @Anchorage reached out to me offering their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I declined, stating we are in deep conversations on our own licensure, have been operating compliantly since inception and have deep expertise in regulated financial markets due to our team’s career experience and uniquely deep relationship with State Street and VanEck.
Following that conversation, Anchorage published a piece, “Anchorage Digital Publishes Stablecoin Safety Matrix, Enables Auto-Conversions to Safe Stablecoins.” In it, they state that Anchorage is delisting both USDC and AUSD for safety concerns, while publishing easily verifiable and known factual inaccuracies. Factual inaccuracies that they have known since our initial listing by Anchorage, corrected again by VanEck representatives before publication of the report, and then were still published and have yet to be retracted. “Specifically, we identified elevated concentration risks associated with their issuer structures—something we believe institutions should carefully evaluate.” Ironically, VanEck has served hundreds more institutional clientele for decades longer than Anchorage has existed. As of writing, VanEck manages more money than the aggregate asset value of all stablecoins in existence, with the exception of Tether.
In this report, Anchorage failed to disclose their economic relationship with Paxos, the issuer of 3 of their top 4 rated stablecoins. Partners of Paxos (i.e., Anchorage) earn a revenue share and basis point fee on mints of their stablecoins, and they have a unique preferred agreement where they get ALL of the revenue from those stables if they sit on the Anchorage platform. That relationship is clearly pertinent to potential customers who might read this report. The same Anchorage executive who reached out to me confirmed two companies were planning to use their “Genius Bill as a Service” product. I surmise they are deemed “safe” stablecoins.
If Anchorage had just delisted USDC and AUSD to prioritize the stablecoins that they have an economic interest in, I would understand it as a business decision. Private businesses can and should act in their own interests.
But attempting to delegitimize AUSD and USDC for “security concerns,” while knowingly publishing false information, is unserious and bizarre.
So let me reiterate and categorize the errors about AUSD: State Street is the cash custodian and fund administrator of The Agora Reserve Fund. VanEck, a $100B+ asset manager, is the investment manager of The Agora Reserve Fund. Anchorage has known this since initial listing and that was confirmed again by VanEck representatives before publication. By their own matrix AUSD should receive a score similar to or better than USDG if the framework was applied uniformly.
I’m sure that Circle, the issuer of USDC, also has similar inaccuracies to correct and claiming that USDC is less safe than USDT, USDG, PYUSD, and USDP clearly belies their true intentions. Circle is a publicly traded company on the NYSE with many years of audited financials and transparency.
As the pioneers of the open-partner framework, Agora is constantly expanding our network of support. At Agora, we endeavor to always be the most transparent, customer-driven, programmable money that serves a global customer base. We are underdogs, relish the fight, and will never pay to play.
Nick van Eck
CEO and Co-Founder of Agora
5.75K
27
PayPal USD price performance in USD
The current price of PayPal USD is $1.0002. Over the last 24 hours, PayPal USD has increased by +0.08%. It currently has a circulating supply of 981,378,427 PYUSD and a maximum supply of 981,378,427 PYUSD, giving it a fully diluted market cap of $981.28M. At present, PayPal USD holds the 50 position in market cap rankings. The PayPal USD/USD price is updated in real-time.
Today
+$0.00080027
+0.08%
7 days
+$0.00083997
+0.08%
30 days
+$0.0011400
+0.11%
3 months
+$0.00053997
+0.05%
Popular PayPal USD conversions
Last updated: 06/27/2025, 10:08
1 PYUSD to USD | $0.99990 |
1 PYUSD to BRL | R$5.4769 |
1 PYUSD to PHP | ₱56.6303 |
1 PYUSD to EUR | €0.85451 |
1 PYUSD to IDR | Rp 16,211.09 |
1 PYUSD to GBP | £0.72785 |
1 PYUSD to CAD | $1.3637 |
1 PYUSD to AED | AED 3.6721 |
About PayPal USD (PYUSD)
The rating provided is an aggregated rating collected by OKX from the sources provided and is for informational purpose only. OKX does not guarantee the quality or accuracy of the ratings. It is not intended to provide (i) investment advice or recommendation; (ii) an offer or solicitation to buy, sell or hold digital assets; or (iii) financial, accounting, legal or tax advice. Digital assets, including stablecoins and NFTs, involve a high degree of risk, can fluctuate greatly, and can even become worthless. The price and performance of the digital assets are not guaranteed and may change without notice. Your digital assets are not covered by insurance against potential losses. Historical returns are not indicative of future returns. OKX does not guarantee any return, repayment of principal or interest. OKX does not provide investment or asset recommendations. You should carefully consider whether trading or holding digital assets is suitable for you in light of your financial condition. Please consult your legal/ tax/ investment professional for questions about your specific circumstances.
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PayPal USD FAQ
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Currently, one PayPal USD is worth $1.0002. For answers and insight into PayPal USD's price action, you're in the right place. Explore the latest PayPal USD charts and trade responsibly with OKX.
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The social content on this page ("Content"), including but not limited to tweets and statistics provided by LunarCrush, is sourced from third parties and provided "as is" for informational purposes only. OKX does not guarantee the quality or accuracy of the Content, and the Content does not represent the views of OKX. It is not intended to provide (i) investment advice or recommendation; (ii) an offer or solicitation to buy, sell or hold digital assets; or (iii) financial, accounting, legal or tax advice. Digital assets, including stablecoins and NFTs, involve a high degree of risk, can fluctuate greatly. The price and performance of the digital assets are not guaranteed and may change without notice.
OKX does not provide investment or asset recommendations. You should carefully consider whether trading or holding digital assets is suitable for you in light of your financial condition. Please consult your legal/tax/investment professional for questions about your specific circumstances. For further details, please refer to our Terms of Use and Risk Warning. By using the third-party website ("TPW"), you accept that any use of the TPW will be subject to and governed by the terms of the TPW. Unless expressly stated in writing, OKX and its affiliates (“OKX”) are not in any way associated with the owner or operator of the TPW. You agree that OKX is not responsible or liable for any loss, damage and any other consequences arising from your use of the TPW. Please be aware that using a TPW may result in a loss or diminution of your assets. Product may not be available in all jurisdictions.
OKX does not provide investment or asset recommendations. You should carefully consider whether trading or holding digital assets is suitable for you in light of your financial condition. Please consult your legal/tax/investment professional for questions about your specific circumstances. For further details, please refer to our Terms of Use and Risk Warning. By using the third-party website ("TPW"), you accept that any use of the TPW will be subject to and governed by the terms of the TPW. Unless expressly stated in writing, OKX and its affiliates (“OKX”) are not in any way associated with the owner or operator of the TPW. You agree that OKX is not responsible or liable for any loss, damage and any other consequences arising from your use of the TPW. Please be aware that using a TPW may result in a loss or diminution of your assets. Product may not be available in all jurisdictions.