PAX Gold active addresses reach all-time high as profits hit 5-month peak
Santiment data shows record wallet activity for the tokenized gold asset even as PAXG trades 26% below its January peak
On-chain analytics firm Santiment flagged that PAX Gold (PAXG) daily active addresses hit an all-time high on July 6, while network realized profits surged to a five-month peak. The combination paints a clear picture: holders are locking in gains during gold’s broader rally, and more wallets than ever are engaging with the tokenized commodity.
The numbers behind the gold rush
PAXG was trading near $4,150 in early July, which might sound impressive until you remember it touched roughly $5,619 on January 29. That’s a decline of about 26% from its all-time high.
Yet the token’s market capitalization still sits at approximately $1.8 billion, backed by a circulating supply of around 452,000 tokens. Each one represents a single fine troy ounce of London Good Delivery gold, stored in LBMA-approved vaults.
The five-month high in realized profits tells us that a meaningful number of PAXG holders bought in at lower prices and are now selling into strength.
Why tokenized gold keeps gaining traction
PAXG is issued by Paxos Trust Company, a New York-based regulated trust company that publishes monthly transparency reports confirming the 1:1 physical gold backing.
Paxos launched PAXG back in September 2019. Each PAXG token is fully redeemable for one troy ounce of investment-grade gold stored in segregated LBMA-approved vaults, and the token operates as an ERC-20 asset on Ethereum, meaning it can be moved, swapped, and settled on-chain.
What this means for investors
The record active address count suggests PAXG is moving beyond its original audience. When wallet activity hits all-time highs on a $1.8 billion market cap asset, it signals that the user base is expanding, not just churning.
The profit-taking dynamic deserves careful attention. When realized profits spike alongside rising active addresses, it can sometimes precede short-term price consolidation. The 26% drawdown from January’s peak suggests that PAXG isn’t immune to the same supply-demand dynamics that govern every other traded asset.
The competitive landscape for tokenized gold is worth monitoring. Tether’s XAUT is the primary rival, and market share shifts between the two tend to follow regulatory sentiment. Paxos’ status as a regulated trust company and its consistent monthly attestations give PAXG an edge with institutional allocators who need compliance checkboxes ticked before they can deploy capital.