Investment
Features
FeesSafety
Academy
More
Pluang+

Compare DeepBook Protocol (DEEP) vs ConstitutionDAO (PEOPLE) Price & Performance

DeepBook ProtocolTrade
ConstitutionDAOTrade

Price performance (Past 24H)

Key statistics

DeepBook Protocol vs ConstitutionDAO — how do they compare? DeepBook Protocol trades at Rp328.61 (market cap Rp1,76T, Rp72,18M 24h volume), while ConstitutionDAO trades at Rp99.91 (market cap Rp507,61M, Rp130,23M 24h volume). The key difference: DeepBook Protocol is far larger — about 3467.2× ConstitutionDAO's market cap, and DeepBook Protocol's supply is capped (5,5B / 10B DEEP (55%)) while ConstitutionDAO's keeps growing. Which is the better fit depends on your goals — on Pluang, investors hold DeepBook Protocol for 13 Days and ConstitutionDAO for 28 Days on average.

DEEPPEOPLE
Market Cap
Rp1,76TRp507,61M
Volume (24h)
Rp72,18MRp130,23M
Circulating Supply
5,5B / 10B DEEP (55%)5,1B PEOPLE
Typical Hold Time
13 Days28 Days

Investor sentiment on Pluang

What Pluang investors did over the last 30 days

DEEP
95% Buy5% Sell
Avg holding period · 13 Days
PEOPLE
100% Buy0% Sell
Avg holding period · 28 Days

Top news

Latest headlines on both assets

About DeepBook Protocol

DeepBook is a decentralized central limit order book (CLOB) on the Sui blockchain, offering high performance and low latency. It operates entirely on-chain, enhancing programmability and liquidity in the DeFi ecosystem. By providing tighter liquidity and greater control for liquidity providers compared to traditional models, DeepBook serves as the key wholesale liquidity venue for diverse financial services.

Read more on DEEP

About ConstitutionDAO

Constitution DAO was an experiment that has now been dissolved. In November 2021, a group web3-enthusiasts gathered as a decentralized autonomous organization with the shared objective of buying a copy of the U.S. Constitution at a Sotheby’s Auction. There are only 13 original physical copies of the U.S Constitution in existence, which meant that this auction sparked a competitive bidding battle. Even though the group managed to raise well over $40 million in ETH, it ultimately fell short and was outbid by Ken Griffin, a billionaire hedge fund manager and CEO of Citadel.

Read more on PEOPLE