Most think altszn needs billions. Nah
Imagine: $10M mc, price: $10
Think it takes $10M to hit $20?
Nope. Just $500k
To crash to $5? $200k
It’s not volume, it’s liquidity, and it changes everything
No one explains this. I'll
➮ To understand how the growth of a particular coin, asset, or even stocks works, you need to look at the following:
- Market cap
- FDV
- Liquidity
- Vesting schedule
Now let's break each one down:
(1st part is more for beginners, for liquidity breakdown skip to tweet 6/)
➮ The easiest: Market Cap
✧ Market cap is the total value of a cryptocurrency's circulating coins/tokens, reflecting the market's perception of an asset's worth
✧ With Simple Words:
Market Cap = Current Token Price × Circulating Supply
Many confuse market cap with FDV:
MC = circ. supply × price
FDV = total supply × price
This mistake gets newbies dumped on every unlock by VCs & early investors.
I will be writing an article on how to avoid becoming exit liquidity in high-FDV, low-cap coins, so make sure to follow me.
➮ What is price?
✧ It’s just what people pay right now - based on supply and demand
✧ But price alone means nothing
If a token has 1 trillion coins, even $0.000001 = $1M market cap.
To hit $1, it would need $1 * 1T = $1T market cap. That’s huge.
Forget about, look at mc
➮ What is Supply vs Circulating Supply?
✧ Supply = total coins that will ever exist
✧ Circulating Supply = what’s currently tradable
That’s why you must watch FDV & unlocks. Some tokens unlock 2× circ supply monthly.
MC might be $10M, but FDV is $200M - and new supply means incoming dumps.
Many miss this and get dumped on. Example: $APT launched with ~130M tokens in circulation, but total supply was 1B.
Every unlock added massive sell pressure.
Market cap looked “cheap” at $500M, but FDV was $4B+.
Always check unlock schedules - sometimes it seems you’re not early, but you’re exit liquidity.
➮ That was the easy part. Now the fun begins:
LIQUIDITY
For some reason, most people still think like this:
✧ Coin X is $1, supply is 1B → $1B market cap
✧ To 2x the price, it needs $1B in buys
But that’s not how it works - at all 👇
➮ At first, it sounds like simple and logical math, but what gets overlooked is liquidity
✧ Liquidity refers to the ability to quickly exchange a crypto at its current price without a significant loss in value
✧ Like a typical issue of large memecoins with 0 liquidity
➮ Liquidity is literally an essential part because:
✧ You can't sell more tokens than the available liquidity permits
✧ Which also means the following👇
✧ Imagine we have an X coin that is listed on only one, single DEX with only $30M available liquidity
At the same time, the token price is $1 and market cap is $1B.
✧ But based on liquidity, it only takes ~$15M in buys to 2x coin X
✧ That kind of injection can double the price - no need to inject $1B
✧ Of course, that pump can be undone just as fast with $15M in sell pressure
But if holders don’t sell into the pump, the price can stay at 2x
Buy volume of $50M vs sell volume of $35M can double the price - it’s totally possible.
But $1B mc with only $30M in real liquidity is already hard to grasp...
In Solana meme coins, the ratio is way more extreme.
A Solana meme with a $300M cap might only have $5M in liquidity.
From there? Do the math.
Buying or selling just 1% of supply can move price 2x in either direction.
That’s why memes fly.
But that doesn’t mean whales are actually cashing out at ATH.
Often, a big bagholder can’t exit near the top - every sell pushes price down hard.
That’s why consolidation phases are crucial - and why what goes up parabolically... usually comes down just as fast.
A recent example: $JELLYJELLY had a $60M market cap - and dumped 50% from just $1.2M in sell pressure.
Exactly, this is how dozens of memecoin creators make daily profits through various schemes
✧ They list the memecoin on one or two DEXs with limited liquidity pools
✧ This way, they can strongly influence the price by creating different pump & dump schemes, etc
So what does this all mean in practice?
Price movements aren’t driven by market cap logic - they’re driven by liquidity and flow. A token with low float and thin liquidity can 2x on hype with minimal buy pressure… but the same works in reverse.
What holds up over time? Projects with deep liquidity, gradual unlocks, strong communities, and real utility or demand.
Chasing low caps can bring fast gains - but without liquidity, you're always one sell away from a 50% nuke.
END
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