Saturday , April 20 2024
Home / Crypto news / The Story Of Polkadot Starts With The 2017 ICO: 2,000% ROI For Early Investors

The Story Of Polkadot Starts With The 2017 ICO: 2,000% ROI For Early Investors

Summary:
Polkadot has quickly gone up the ranks and became one of the biggest cryptocurrency projects. Its native token DOT was recently denominated at a 1:100 ratio. After the event, early Polkadot investors can benefit from a nearly 2,000% ROI.This became possible following the latest company developments, mainnet launch news, and DOT listings on several prominent cryptocurrency exchanges.Polkadot’s History and MissionAlthough the original Polkadot whitepaper saw the light of day in October 2016, it wasn’t until a year later when the project raised funds via an initial coin offering (ICO). It occurred after Dr. Gavin Wood, and Peter Czaban founded the Web3 Foundation – a non-profit organization supporting the research and development of the Polkadot network.The Foundation concluded a rather

Topics:
Jordan Lyanchev considers the following as important: ,

This could be interesting, too:

Wayne Jones writes BAYC Creator Yuga Labs Offloaded 2 NFT Games to Faraway

Chayanika Deka writes Binance Executive’s Legal Battle in Nigeria Hits Another Roadblock as Appeal Stalls

Martin Young writes Ethereum Network Generated 0M in Profit in Q1, as ETH Reclaims K

Andrew Throuvalas writes Why The Halving Cannot Be Completely Priced In: Bitwise CIO

Polkadot has quickly gone up the ranks and became one of the biggest cryptocurrency projects. Its native token DOT was recently denominated at a 1:100 ratio. After the event, early Polkadot investors can benefit from a nearly 2,000% ROI.

This became possible following the latest company developments, mainnet launch news, and DOT listings on several prominent cryptocurrency exchanges.

Polkadot’s History and Mission

Although the original Polkadot whitepaper saw the light of day in October 2016, it wasn’t until a year later when the project raised funds via an initial coin offering (ICO). It occurred after Dr. Gavin Wood, and Peter Czaban founded the Web3 Foundation – a non-profit organization supporting the research and development of the Polkadot network.

The Foundation concluded a rather successful ICO in October 2017 and raised over $140 million by selling 50% of the 10,000,000 DOT token supply. Despite some unfortunate events that led to the loss of over half of the raised funds, Polkadot endured. The company conducted two private sales – one in 2019 and one in the summer of 2020.

Built on top of the Substrate blockchain framework, all Polkadot-based chains and apps can transact and transfer data with other Substrate-based chains. In other words, the Polkadot network allows interoperability and scalability for all networks that employ it.

Some of the most recent developments include launching a testnet designed for parachains and their related technologies dubbed Rococo. By integrating Polkadot with Cumulus and HRMP, Rococo enables developers to register a Substrate-based chain as a parachain and message the Relay Chain, and “write logic for parachains to send messages to other parachains through the Relay Chain.”

The Story Of Polkadot Starts With The 2017 ICO: 2,000% ROI For Early Investors
Polkadot Logo. Source: Medium

DOT Redenomination and ROI

During Polkadot’s ICO in October 2017, DOT tokens were sold at an average of $30 per coin. At the time of this writing, one DOT costs just shy of $6 but there’s a catch.

On August 21st this year, the DOT token was effectively redenominated by a factor of 100. This means that existing holders received 100 new DOT for the old ones they held. In other words, those who purchased 1 DOT at $30 back in 2017 now hold 100 DOT priced at $6 each, giving a total value of $600 for one coin.

In other words, ICO investors have seen a massive increase of roughly around 2000%.

The journey wasn’t without its bumps, though. Despite the initial warnings of the team, some cryptocurrency exchanges such as Binance and Kraken listed the DOT token prior to its redenomination, which caused some confusion and even cost investors some money.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *