How it works
A project publishes its tokenomics in a whitepaper or governance forum. Standard components include max supply, initial distribution (team, investors, treasury, public), emission schedule, vesting cliffs and linear unlocks, burn mechanisms, staking yields, and utility (governance, fee discount, gas, collateral). Each component shapes incentives for builders, holders, and users.
Example
Ethereum tokenomics: no fixed max supply, but base fees are burned via EIP-1559, sometimes making the supply deflationary. Issuance rewards stakers at about 4 percent annually. No vesting cliff for ordinary users. Compare to a typical Layer 1 launch: 20 percent to team with 1-year cliff and 3-year linear vest, 30 percent to private investors with similar vesting, 10 percent ecosystem treasury, 40 percent public allocation. Unlock dates in years 1-4 create predictable selling pressure.
Why it matters
Tokenomics determines whether a price chart over the next two years is fighting tailwinds or headwinds. A project with rapidly unlocking insider supply has structural sell pressure regardless of product success. A project with deflationary mechanics and capped supply benefits from any demand growth. Read tokenomics before any meaningful position; it is the single most underanalysed factor among retail.