Crypto Supply & Valuation Explained for Beginners
Many beginners make the mistake of looking only at the price of a coin.
A coin at $0.01 is not necessarily cheaper than a coin at $100.
To understand a crypto asset properly, you need to understand these 5 concepts:
1)Circulating Supply
2)Total Supply
3)Max Supply
4)Market Cap
5)Fully Diluted Valuation (FDV)
Smart money is moving into $BTW.
On-chain data shows massive whale accumulation over the last 7 days. No selling, just constant buying.
When the big players accumulate this quietly, something is usually cooking. 🐋
I'm keeping my eyes on this one for sure.
Smart money is moving into $BTW.
On-chain data shows massive whale accumulation over the last 7 days. No selling, just constant buying.
When the big players accumulate this quietly, something is usually cooking. 🐋
I'm keeping my eyes on this one for sure.
Smart money is moving into $BTW.
On-chain data shows massive whale accumulation over the last 7 days. No selling, just constant buying.
When the big players accumulate this quietly, something is usually cooking. 🐋
I'm keeping my eyes on this one for sure.
The fact that the drawdowns are getting shallower (79% to 69%) proves the asset is maturing. Lower volatility on the downside usually precedes an explosive move on the upside. Great chart. 📊
It’s not that gold is failing; it’s just that Bitcoin is a faster horse. In a world of infinite money printing, you want the asset with the highest velocity and lowest supply.
Smart money is moving into $BTW.
On-chain data shows massive whale accumulation over the last 7 days. No selling, just constant buying.
When the big players accumulate this quietly, something is usually cooking. 🐋
I'm keeping my eyes on this one for sure.
$LAB is a perfect case study of crypto psychology:
Price dumps -> Everyone panics and calls it "dead."
Sentiment hits rock bottom.
Today -> It pumps 100%+.
The best buying opportunities always look the scariest.
$1,000 investment in $ANSEM back in June would be worth $2 Million today.
Absolutely mind-blowing.
The crypto space is actually not real life sometimes🤯
@AshCrypto The hardest part wasn't buying Bitcoin at $0.78.
The hardest part was holding through years of volatility, crashes, and uncertainty.
Conviction is often more valuable than timing.
Someone bought 10,000 Bitcoin in 2011 for $7,805 when BTC was trading at $0.78.
He survived multiple crashes and held for nearly 14 years without touching a single coin.
Then in 2025 he sold it for over $1 Billion, making a 128,205x return.
@cryptogoos A valuation of around $42 billion reflects just how important memory manufacturing has become. As AI, cloud computing, and data centers expand, demand for DRAM is likely to remain a key theme.