Crypto markets overall are about where they were at the start of the year. But not every crypto has gone sideways like bitcoin and ether.
SUI, the native token for the layer-1 blockchain of the same name, has almost doubled its price against bitcoin since January 1.
The network, stewarded by former Meta employees once focused on Diem and considered a rival to Solana, also just passed $500 million in total value locked in its DeFi apps for the first time.
SUI leads a small set of cryptocurrencies which have seen their bitcoin ratios increase in the year to date.
Of the 60 or so cryptocurrencies worth $1 billion or more which aren’t stablecoins, wrapped assets or liquid staking tokens, only 14 are ahead against bitcoin.
The bitcoin price ratio for machine-learning marketplace token Bittensor (TAO) is up 60% this year, followed by modular data layer Celestia’s TIA with 46%.
ASTR, the crypto central to public Polkadot parachain Astar, has also added nearly one-third to its bitcoin price ratio.
Astar presents itself as a “smart contract hub” that helps move assets between blockchains including Ethereum and Cosmos. The team maintains a strong presence in Japan and is preparing to debut its own zkEVM based on Polygon’s chain development kit.
Bitcoin-powered memecoin ORDI, layer-1 token algorand (ALGO) and decentralized storage asset filecoin (FIL) have performed the worst against bitcoin so far this year, each down around 30%.
ORDI — styled as the first-ever BRC-20 token issued via Ordinals — had however multiplied its bitcoin ratio over the past six months, leading TIA and TAO for bitcoin-denominated returns.
Of the studied cohort, cryptocurrencies for legacy layer-1s Stellar (XLM), XRP, Litecoin (LTC) and Monero (XMR) fared the worst against bitcoin in the past half-year, each losing about 40%.