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The real market cap of a coin is not the number you see on the chart.
It’s the amount of actual liquidity behind it.
Example:
A coin with a $10 million market cap and only 10% liquidity ($1 million in the pool) is really just a $1 million coin.
If someone sells 10% of the total supply, they are trying to sell roughly the entire liquidity pool. The price doesn’t just drop it usually crashes toward zero because there simply isn’t enough real money there to absorb the sell.
This is why almost every market cap you see is fake.
The only number that actually matters is the liquidity ratio.
You are much better off DCA’ing into a lower market cap coin that has a good team behind it and a high liquidity ratio than chasing a fake high market cap coin with a low liquidity ratio that makes it extremely high risk.
I don’t tell people to buy coins, but when I do, I only recommend doing it through liquidity provision or steady DCA on coins where the team actually cares — like we do with $DOG.
The KOLs you follow either don’t understand this, or they do and they want you as exit liquidity. I am not like them. I want to educate people in crypto, not use them as exit liquidity, and actually build something real.
On $DOG the liquidity ratio actually matches the market cap, making it far more real than most coins in this space.
CA: 21CnrFRqvEVkQZUTFmTXjcsJTLZhRY51ohoaCPwRpump
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