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Committed Claim

A committed claim is the firmest pre-execution status in Tokenomist's claim lifecycle, indicating that the team has announced a specific amount will be claimed but the transaction has not yet been confirmed on-chain. It represents the final stage before completion.
TradFi parallel — Like a corporate insider's binding commitment to exercise stock options at a declared price and quantity — the intent is firm, the settlement is pending.

Key Takeaways

  • 01
    Committed is the firmest pre-execution status in the claim lifecycle: Whitepaper → Committed → Completed
  • 02
    Shown with a yellow badge under a dedicated section header in Supply Analytics, signaling high-confidence upcoming supply changes
  • 03
    Tokenomist compares the committed amount against the whitepaper schedule and flags MATCH or MISMATCH for each claim
  • 04
    A MISMATCH between committed and whitepaper amounts can indicate accelerated vesting, deferred distribution, or revised tokenomics
  • 05
    Committed claims provide the narrowest and most actionable window for traders to assess and react to imminent supply expansion
  • 06
    The transition from whitepaper to committed status confirms team intent and removes the uncertainty inherent in whitepaper-only estimates

How It Works

In Tokenomist's three-stage claim lifecycle — Whitepaper, Committed, Completed — the committed status represents the highest-confidence pre-execution state. When a claim moves from whitepaper to committed, it means the project team has publicly confirmed both the amount and the intent to execute. This is not a projection or estimate; it is a declared commitment that the tokens will be claimed. On the Tokenomist platform, committed claims appear under a dedicated "Committed" section header with a yellow badge in Supply Analytics. Each committed claim displays the amount, the expected date, and crucially, whether the committed amount matches the original whitepaper schedule. Tokenomist flags this as either MATCH or MISMATCH — a MATCH confirms the team is following the original plan, while a MISMATCH indicates a deviation that warrants closer attention. Mismatches can occur in either direction: a team may claim more than scheduled (accelerated vesting) or less (deferred distribution). For tokens like Hyperliquid, committed claims are particularly significant because they represent imminent supply changes. The committed status gives investors a narrow but actionable window to evaluate the market impact. A committed claim of 2% of total supply on a token with thin liquidity has very different implications than the same percentage on a deeply liquid market. Tokenomist provides both the claim percentage and the context needed to assess materiality.

Real World Examples

Hyperliquid Committed Claims with MATCH Status
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When Hyperliquid's team commits to a claim that matches the original whitepaper schedule, Tokenomist displays a MATCH indicator alongside the committed amount. This confirms the team is following the published distribution plan and the supply impact aligns with market expectations.
Hyperliquid Committed Claims with MISMATCH Status
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Occasionally, Hyperliquid's committed claim amount differs from the whitepaper projection. Tokenomist flags these as MISMATCH, alerting users that the actual supply impact will be larger or smaller than originally anticipated — a critical signal for position sizing and risk management.
Hyperliquid Multi-Allocation Committed Claims
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Hyperliquid may have multiple committed claims across different allocations — such as team, ecosystem fund, and community rewards — active simultaneously. Tokenomist aggregates these under the Committed section so investors can assess total imminent supply pressure rather than evaluating each claim in isolation.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does MATCH vs MISMATCH mean for a committed claim?
MATCH means the committed claim amount is identical to what the whitepaper schedule projected for that date and allocation. MISMATCH means the team has committed to a different amount — either more or less than originally planned. Tokenomist displays this comparison directly in Supply Analytics so you can instantly identify deviations from the published tokenomics.
How long does a claim typically stay in committed status?
The duration varies by project. Some teams commit and execute within hours; others may commit days or weeks before on-chain execution. On Tokenomist, committed claims display the expected execution date alongside the committed amount. Monitor the Supply Analytics tab for real-time status updates as claims progress from committed to completed.
Can a committed claim be revoked or changed?
While uncommon, teams can revise committed amounts or delay execution. Tokenomist tracks these changes and updates the Supply Analytics display. If a committed claim is modified, the MATCH/MISMATCH status recalculates against the whitepaper baseline, ensuring you always see the most current comparison.
Why is the committed stage important for trading decisions?
Committed claims represent near-certain supply expansion with a known amount and approximate timing. This is the narrowest actionable window before tokens enter circulation. By comparing the committed amount against circulating supply and daily trading volume — both available on the Hyperliquid Token Page — traders can assess whether the claim is material enough to affect price.

Related Terms

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Supply-side analysis for educational purposes. Not financial advice. Verify assumption and precision labels on the relevant token page.
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