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Monero (XMR): The Complete Intelligence Brief
Monero explained. How ring signatures, stealth addresses, and RingCT work together to provide mandatory privacy, why XMR is the leading privacy coin, and the regulatory pressure surrounding it.
Updated April 22, 2026· CRYPTINT.IO Intelligence
Key Takeaways
- +Monero (XMR) is the leading privacy-focused cryptocurrency. Every XMR transaction is private by default. Amounts, senders, and receivers are all obfuscated on-chain.
- +Monero uses ring signatures (to obscure the sender), stealth addresses (to obscure the recipient), and RingCT / Bulletproofs (to obscure amounts). These are not optional features; they're mandatory on every transaction.
- +Since November 2019, Monero has used the RandomX mining algorithm, optimized for general-purpose CPUs and designed to be resistant to ASIC mining. This keeps XMR mining accessible to ordinary users.
- +Monero has no hard supply cap. After the main emission curve completed in 2022, a 'tail emission' of 0.6 XMR per block continues indefinitely, maintaining miner incentives and creating low but non-zero inflation.
- +Regulatory pressure on privacy coins has led multiple exchanges (Binance for EU users, Kraken in some regions, Bittrex, Huobi) to delist Monero over the past several years. XMR remains available on many exchanges and through peer-to-peer channels.
Quick Facts
Monero at a glance
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Ticker | XMR |
| Token type | Native L1 asset |
| Consensus | Proof of Work (RandomX, CPU-friendly) |
| Launched | April 18, 2014 (fork of Bytecoin) |
| Original founder | Pseudonymous ('thankful_for_today'); current dev team public |
| Block time | ~2 minutes |
| Block reward model | Variable main emission (2014-2022) + tail emission of 0.6 XMR/block indefinitely |
| Circulating supply (Apr 2026) | ~18.9 million XMR |
| Max supply | No hard cap (continuous 0.6 XMR/block tail emission) |
| Privacy defaults | Mandatory. Ring signatures, stealth addresses, RingCT |
| Primary explorer | xmrchain.net |
| Alternative explorers | exploremonero.com, moneroblocks.info |
| Popular wallets | Monero GUI, Cake Wallet, Monerujo, Feather Wallet |
| Official site | getmonero.org |
What Is Monero?
Monero is a cryptocurrency built around mandatory privacy. Every XMR transaction obscures the sender, the receiver, and the amount. There's no "transparent mode" option. Privacy is the default, not an optional feature users can turn on or off.
This mandatory privacy distinguishes Monero from most other cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin's ledger is pseudonymous but fully public. Addresses and amounts are visible to anyone. Zcash offers optional privacy but most of its volume uses the transparent t-addresses. Only Monero enforces privacy for every transaction on every block.
XMR is Monero's native asset. It's used for privacy-preserving peer-to-peer payments, as a store of value within the privacy-coin category, and as a censorship-resistant settlement asset. There is no smart contract layer, no DeFi, no NFTs. Monero does one thing: private payments.
The Origin Story
CryptoNote and Bytecoin
Monero traces its technical heritage to the CryptoNote whitepaper, published in October 2013 by "Nicolas van Saberhagen" (a pseudonym).[1] CryptoNote introduced ring signatures and stealth addresses as privacy primitives.
Bytecoin was the first CryptoNote-based cryptocurrency, launched in 2012. However, Bytecoin had a significant problem: a claimed pre-mine of ~80% of its supply, which became public in 2014 after the project had already distributed that supply to undisclosed parties.
The Fork
In April 2014, a developer using the pseudonym "thankful_for_today" created a fork of Bytecoin called BitMonero. Disagreements with the BitMonero lead quickly splintered the project, and a community-led fork called Monero emerged under different leadership. Monero inherited CryptoNote's cryptography but not Bytecoin's controversial pre-mine.
Core Developer Evolution
Monero's development has been community-led throughout its history. The core team has included public developers like Riccardo "fluffypony" Spagni (former maintainer), Francisco "ArticMine" Cabañas, and others. There is no centralized foundation controlling the project. Development is funded through a community crowdfunding system (CCS) where individual developers propose work and community members fund it.
Major Upgrades
- 2014-2015: Initial RingCT research
- January 2017: RingCT activation (amounts hidden)
- October 2018: Bulletproofs activation (more efficient RingCT)
- November 2019: RandomX activation (CPU-friendly mining, ASIC-resistant)
- August 2022: Tail emission begins (main emission curve complete)
- 2024: Full-chain membership proofs research (potential future upgrade)
How Monero Works
Ring Signatures
When you sign a Monero transaction, the signature is computed using a ring of possible signers. Your real private key mixed with 15 decoy keys pulled from prior transactions. The signature proves that one member of the ring signed, but doesn't reveal which.
An observer can see that some output from the ring was spent, but not which specific output. This breaks the transaction graph analysis that works on Bitcoin and similar chains.
Stealth Addresses
When you receive XMR, the sender doesn't send to your public address. Instead, they derive a one-time stealth address for each transaction using your public view key and a random nonce. Only you, with your private view key, can detect that the transaction is for you and derive the corresponding private spend key.
Every incoming transaction appears at a completely different address. This breaks address-clustering heuristics that work on Bitcoin.
RingCT and Bulletproofs
Ring Confidential Transactions (RingCT) hide transaction amounts using homomorphic commitments. The network can verify that inputs equal outputs (plus fees) without knowing the specific amounts involved.
Bulletproofs replaced the original RingCT range proofs with dramatically more efficient proofs in 2018, reducing transaction sizes and fees significantly.
RandomX Mining
Since November 2019, Monero has used RandomX. A Proof of Work algorithm designed specifically for general-purpose CPUs. RandomX runs random code sequences that heavily exercise CPU features (cache, branch prediction, out-of-order execution) that are hard to replicate efficiently in ASICs.
This keeps Monero mining genuinely decentralized. Anyone with a modern CPU can mine XMR (though home mining is rarely profitable given electricity costs). Botnet-driven mining and opportunistic CPU mining make up a notable portion of the hashrate.
Dandelion++
For network-layer privacy, Monero uses Dandelion++. A transaction relay protocol that makes it hard to link transaction origins to specific IP addresses. Combined with Tor and I2P routing options in Monero wallets, this provides privacy beyond just the on-chain level.
Tokenomics
Tail Emission
Monero is unique among major cryptocurrencies in having no hard cap. The emission schedule:
- Main emission (2014-2022): Block rewards decreased smoothly until the total emission approached ~18.4 million XMR
- Tail emission (May 2022 onward): Fixed 0.6 XMR per block forever
At 2-minute blocks, tail emission produces approximately 157,680 XMR per year. As a percentage of circulating supply, inflation is currently around 0.8% and decreases over time as the circulating supply grows.
The reason for tail emission: to preserve miner incentives after block rewards would otherwise approach zero. Bitcoin's reliance on fee-driven security after ~2140 is an unproven economic model; Monero chose to solve this with permanent low-level issuance.
No Premine
Monero has no official pre-mine. Unlike Bytecoin (its parent project), Monero's emission started at genesis with normal block rewards. This clean launch is part of Monero's credibility.
Fees
Monero fees are dynamic based on transaction size and network demand. Typical fees are a few cents. Low enough that privacy doesn't require a cost premium versus transparent chains.
The Ecosystem
Exchange Availability
Monero has faced sustained regulatory pressure, leading to delistings on multiple major exchanges:
- Kraken: delisted for EU users (2024) and some jurisdictions
- Binance: delisted for EU and UK users
- OKX: delisted
- Bittrex, Huobi, some others: delisted entirely or in specific regions
XMR remains available on Kraken (for US users and most regions), KuCoin, Gate.io, some regional exchanges, and extensively on peer-to-peer platforms (LocalMonero, Cake Wallet, atomic swaps).
Wallets
Key Monero wallets:
- Monero GUI: official desktop wallet and full node
- Cake Wallet: popular mobile wallet with built-in fiat on-ramp
- Monerujo: Android wallet
- Feather Wallet: Qt-based desktop alternative
- Ledger and Trezor: hardware wallet support (Ledger with Monero GUI/CLI, Trezor Model T with Suite)
Setting up Monero wallets is generally more complex than Bitcoin wallets due to the privacy features. First-time users often find the view-key / spend-key separation confusing.
Atomic Swaps
Monero atomic swaps with Bitcoin (and other chains) have become increasingly usable. COMIT Network, AtomicDEX, and other protocols enable direct XMR-BTC swaps without a custodial intermediary.
Price History
XMR Major Price Milestones
| Date | Event | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Apr 2014 | Launch | ~$0.50 |
| Dec 2017 | First cycle peak | $495 |
| Dec 2018 | Bear market low | $41 |
| May 2021 | Mid-cycle peak | $517 |
| Nov 2022 | FTX-era low | $128 |
| Jan 2024 | Binance delisting low | $135 |
| Nov 2024 | Post-election peak | $185 |
| Apr 2026 | Current (as of this brief) | ~$195 |
Monero Today
Regulatory Pressure
Privacy coins face particular regulatory scrutiny due to concerns about money laundering and sanctions evasion. The exchange delisting trend has continued through 2024-2025, though no major jurisdiction has outright banned Monero ownership.
Chainalysis and other blockchain analytics firms have claimed partial deanonymization capabilities against Monero transactions using statistical analysis and metadata. The effectiveness of these techniques against current Monero (with 16-output rings, Bulletproofs, and Dandelion++) is disputed.[2]
Full-Chain Membership Proofs
The Monero research community is working on a major upgrade: full-chain membership proofs. Rather than signing with a ring of 16 decoys, signers would prove membership in the entire chain's anonymity set. This would dramatically expand privacy guarantees.
The upgrade timeline is uncertain. It's a substantial research and engineering effort with multiple open questions still being resolved.
Market Position
Monero remains the dominant privacy coin by market cap and usage. Zcash (the main technical alternative) has smaller adoption in practice because most Zcash activity uses transparent addresses. Dash (once positioned as a privacy coin) has moved away from that focus. Other privacy coins (Pirate Chain, Haven, etc.) have small user bases.
No ETF Pathway
Privacy coins are essentially excluded from the US spot ETF framework. The SEC would likely reject any privacy coin ETF on BSA/AML grounds. This limits Monero's institutional access compared to BTC, ETH, or even altcoins like SOL and XRP.
Why Monero Matters
Monero matters because it's the only mainstream cryptocurrency where financial privacy is the default rather than an optional feature. For many users. Journalists in hostile regimes, dissidents, people in abusive relationships, legitimate privacy advocates, and yes, sometimes bad actors. Default financial privacy is genuinely valuable.
For traders, XMR has unique dynamics. It's uncorrelated with most of the crypto market in meaningful ways. Regulatory news hits XMR harder than it hits other assets, exchange delistings create persistent overhangs, and XMR's narrative is orthogonal to DeFi, memecoin, and AI cycles that drive broader crypto rotations. Signal categories that matter: regulatory headlines, exchange listing status changes, privacy-coin narrative cycles, and peer-to-peer market depth.
The risks are severe. Regulatory pressure has already caused material delisting. A coordinated crackdown from major jurisdictions could accelerate this pattern. The opportunity is in the durability. Monero has weathered a decade of pressure while maintaining its privacy guarantees and user base. If financial privacy becomes a more prominent political issue (privacy-centric wallets, CBDC resistance, sanctions compliance debates), XMR is positioned uniquely.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Intelligence
News
SEC Crypto Enforcement
Regulatory context for privacy coins including exchange delistings, enforcement priorities, and why XMR is excluded from most institutional products.
News
Regulation by Country
How different jurisdictions treat privacy coins. The EU's MiCA rules, Japan's outright restrictions, and varying US state-level policies.
On-Chain
Blockchain Explorers
What Monero explorers can and cannot show, and how XMR's explorer experience differs from transparent chains.
On-Chain
Tokenomics
Understanding Monero's tail emission model and how it differs from Bitcoin's asymptotic zero-issuance design.
Not financial advice. Educational purposes only. Do your own research.
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