Stacks (STX) Sentiment & Fear and Greed Index
As of July 5, 2026, Stacks's Ruma Fear & Greed Index is 10 (Extreme Fear), its social sentiment score is 34/100 (bearish), it holds 0.00% of crypto social mindshare. These signals are computed by Ruma from social posts across crypto Twitter/X and other sources, scored with large language models rather than keyword counts.
Updated continuously · Source: Ruma
Latest Stacks insights
Nakamoto Inc's UTXO Management is utilizing Stacks to generate yield on its substantial 5,000 BTC treasury. This initiative directly addresses the increasing demand from institutional Bitcoin holders seeking native BTC yield solutions without requiring their assets to be wrapped or bridged.
Zest Protocol announced it has reached $8.7 million in total active loans. This portfolio includes over 10 BTC, 4 million USDCx, 4 million STX, and 2 million USDh, showcasing the protocol's current activity.
Zest Protocol, which facilitates native Bitcoin lending on the Stacks network, has been included in a Real World Asset (RWA) portfolio. This integration expands the protocol's reach, linking its decentralized finance services with traditional asset investment frameworks.
Frequently asked questions
What is Stacks's Fear & Greed Index?
Stacks's Ruma Fear & Greed Index is currently 10 out of 100, which is Extreme Fear. The index blends social sentiment, social interest, price momentum, volatility, and emotional intensity into a single 0–100 sentiment score, updated continuously.
Is Stacks bullish or bearish right now?
Stacks's social sentiment is currently bearish, with a sentiment score of 34/100 based on how bullish or bearish the crypto social conversation is. Sentiment reflects the mood of the market, not price direction or financial advice.
How does Ruma measure Stacks sentiment?
Ruma reads every relevant social post about Stacks across crypto Twitter/X and other sources and scores it with large language models — capturing bullish/bearish tone, emotion, and who is speaking (from retail to smart money) — rather than counting keywords.
