True value of any cryptocurrency:

How do you consider what the true value of a coin is? What is its fair price?

Typically, the value of the coin is sought based on the technological and practical importance of its project. A truly pioneering, revolutionary, and useful project will always have a better image, being more attractive to investors.

Starting the search for real value from there is a good start, but information about the project, no matter how clear and objective it is, does not give you a value, a number. You cannot analyze a project and say, oh, this coin is worth U$43.20. There is no way to arrive at a number solely based on the technical content of the asset. The market, including ordinary investors, whales, developers, and all involved actors, will define this value.

I always do the following exercise before entering any asset. I look at the price at which it is being traded, check the maximum issuance quantity, and multiply.

Ex: $USUAL is being traded at 0.0243. The maximum would be 4 billion tokens, so if all the coins are circulating, we would reach a total value of 164 million dollars. It is at this point that I start to see if the coin is of interest or not. Does this token really worth 164 million? If I don’t believe it, I won’t even enter. Other arguments don’t matter.

For this reason, I do not consider the possibility of buying assets with infinite issuance. There is no way to see a real value in them. To me, they are worth nothing, not even $ETH is free from the ill-fated fate of having a night of $OM and waking up worth 90% less than it was. The community becomes hostage to the developers' strategies.