Cardano was co-founded in 2017 by Charles Hoskinson — also a co-founder of Ethereum — and Jeremy Wood. The project is maintained by three organisations: Input Output Global (IOG), the Cardano Foundation, and Emurgo. Hoskinson is one of the most recognisable and vocal figures in crypto. Cardano leads all tracked Layer 1s in all-time code commits per Token Terminal data as of April 2026.
Cardano uses the Ouroboros proof-of-stake consensus mechanism. Key upgrades in 2026 include the Van Rossem hard fork (Q2 2026) adding new Plutus smart contract capabilities, and the Ouroboros Leios testnet launch targeting a 10-65x throughput improvement. Midnight, Cardano's privacy-focused partner chain, launched on mainnet in Q1 2026. T. Rowe Price included ADA in an active crypto ETF filing in May 2026.
ADA has a maximum supply of 45 billion tokens, with approximately 36 billion in circulation. At $0.25, the market cap is approximately $9 billion — ADA's all-time high was $3.09 in September 2021, meaning it currently trades approximately 92% below its peak.
Cardano competes directly with Ethereum, Solana, and other Layer 1 smart contract platforms. Despite years of development, it has not achieved the developer adoption or DeFi TVL of its main competitors. On March 18, 2026, Hyperliquid's HYPE token surpassed ADA in market cap.
Cardano's most persistent criticism is that it has consistently promised more than it has delivered on adoption timelines. DeFi TVL remains a fraction of competitors. IOG submitted a governance proposal for 62 million ADA for Q3 2026 through Q1 2027 maintenance, framing it as essential — suggesting ongoing funding dependence.
Leios upgrade delivers the promised 10-65x throughput improvement, Midnight sidechain attracts enterprise privacy use cases, the T. Rowe Price ETF is approved, or a bull market brings retail attention back to established Layer 1s with ETF exposure.
Leios upgrade is delayed or underperforms, IOG governance proposals create friction within the community, or Ethereum and Solana continue to widen their ecosystem lead making Cardano's recovery increasingly difficult.
We would become more positive if: DeFi TVL closes the gap with Ethereum and Solana, Leios upgrade is deployed to mainnet successfully, or major institutional adoption beyond the T. Rowe Price ETF inclusion materialises. We would become more cautious if: development delays continue, IOG funding demands increase, or developer activity metrics fall below competitors.
Cardano is a technically credible project with genuine institutional backing and the highest code commit activity of any Layer 1. But the persistent gap between development activity and real-world adoption, combined with a price 92% below its all-time high, makes it a high-risk recovery play. The speculative upside profile is moderate but uncertainty about the timeline is significant.