Siren (SIREN) has experienced a sharp rally, surging 20.2% over the past 24 hours to reach $0.30182 as of 09:52 UTC on March 2, 2026. The cryptocurrency’s market capitalization has climbed to $223.09 million, positioning it at rank #163 among all digital assets.
The token recorded a 24-hour high of $0.306077 and a low of $0.228173, demonstrating significant intraday volatility. Trading volume reached $14.5 million, indicating robust market activity accompanying the price surge.
Siren’s market capitalization increased by $39.7 million in the past day, representing a 21.7% gain. The cryptocurrency has shown consistent momentum across multiple timeframes, with a 7.2% gain over the past hour and a 6.8% increase over the past week.
The 30-day performance is particularly striking, with SIREN up 227.2% from levels seen one month ago. This places the token well above its all-time low of $0.0263 recorded on March 11, 2025, representing a gain of over 1,058% from that bottom.
The circulating supply stands at 728.86 million SIREN tokens, matching the current total supply. With a maximum supply cap of 1 billion tokens, approximately 72.9% of the total token allocation is currently in circulation.
Despite the recent rally, SIREN remains 43.8% below its all-time high of $0.543149, which was reached on February 26, 2026, just four days ago. This suggests the token experienced a sharp correction before today’s recovery rally.
The substantial 24-hour trading volume of $14.5 million represents approximately 6.5% of the token’s market capitalization, indicating strong liquidity and active trader participation. The intraday price range from $0.228 to $0.306 shows a spread of over 34%, highlighting the volatile nature of current trading conditions.
Market participants should note the rapid price movements and elevated volatility when considering position sizing and risk management strategies. The token’s recent price action suggests heightened speculative interest, though traders should remain cautious given the proximity to recent all-time highs and the subsequent correction.


