Beginner traders often confuse capitalization with the actual volume of money in the market. In fact, these are two completely different indicators. Let's understand why capitalization can increase by millions, but that does not mean that the same amount of capital has entered the market.
What Does Market Capitalization Really Show
Cryptocurrency capitalization is the product of the current price and the number of coins in circulation. It sounds simple, but within this simplicity lies the main trap for newcomers.
Let's say the token costs $10 and there are 50 million units in circulation. The market capitalization will be $500 million. It would seem that this means half a billion dollars has been invested in the market. In reality, the price depends not on the total capital but on the ratio of supply and demand in the last transaction. If the price rises to $15, the market capitalization will jump to $750 million. The difference of $250 million is not new invested capital but simply a revaluation of existing assets.
Why Such Jumps Are Possible: The Role of Liquidity and Volume
Here, trading volume and market liquidity come into play. These indicators work in tandem, but they should not be confused.
Volume is the amount of assets sold and bought over a certain period. Liquidity reflects the ease of buying or selling without a significant impact on the price. A market with high liquidity is a venue with a full order book, where prices are set at different price ranges. This structure complicates manipulation for large players (whales). They will require truly significant amounts to move the price.
The opposite situation occurs in illiquid markets. Here, just a few million is enough for a significant jump in capitalization, as there are few orders in the order book, and even a small purchase can drastically change the price. The volatility of such a market is much higher, and manipulations are easier.
Output: Capitalization is a comparison tool, not a measure of inflow.
Market capitalization is useful for assessing the relative size of a project, but it does not show the actual amount of money in the system. Look at trading volumes, analyze liquidity, and do not fall for the tricks of sharp jumps in capitalization — behind them may lie a simple overvaluation without serious market filling.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
How capitalization defines the scale of a crypto project
Beginner traders often confuse capitalization with the actual volume of money in the market. In fact, these are two completely different indicators. Let's understand why capitalization can increase by millions, but that does not mean that the same amount of capital has entered the market.
What Does Market Capitalization Really Show
Cryptocurrency capitalization is the product of the current price and the number of coins in circulation. It sounds simple, but within this simplicity lies the main trap for newcomers.
Let's say the token costs $10 and there are 50 million units in circulation. The market capitalization will be $500 million. It would seem that this means half a billion dollars has been invested in the market. In reality, the price depends not on the total capital but on the ratio of supply and demand in the last transaction. If the price rises to $15, the market capitalization will jump to $750 million. The difference of $250 million is not new invested capital but simply a revaluation of existing assets.
Why Such Jumps Are Possible: The Role of Liquidity and Volume
Here, trading volume and market liquidity come into play. These indicators work in tandem, but they should not be confused.
Volume is the amount of assets sold and bought over a certain period. Liquidity reflects the ease of buying or selling without a significant impact on the price. A market with high liquidity is a venue with a full order book, where prices are set at different price ranges. This structure complicates manipulation for large players (whales). They will require truly significant amounts to move the price.
The opposite situation occurs in illiquid markets. Here, just a few million is enough for a significant jump in capitalization, as there are few orders in the order book, and even a small purchase can drastically change the price. The volatility of such a market is much higher, and manipulations are easier.
Output: Capitalization is a comparison tool, not a measure of inflow.
Market capitalization is useful for assessing the relative size of a project, but it does not show the actual amount of money in the system. Look at trading volumes, analyze liquidity, and do not fall for the tricks of sharp jumps in capitalization — behind them may lie a simple overvaluation without serious market filling.