Question from BitcoinTalk: “I see market cap, volume, circulating supply — what do these numbers mean?”
Short answer: CoinMarketCap and CoinGecko are cryptocurrency data aggregators. They show price, market cap, volume, supply, and rankings. The most important metrics are market cap (not price) for comparing coins, volume for liquidity, and circulating supply for inflation.
Key Metrics Explained
Market Capitalization
Total value of all coins in circulation. Calculated as: Price × Circulating Supply.
Why it matters: Market cap is the most important metric for comparing coins. A coin at $0.01 with 1 billion supply ($10M market cap) is smaller than a coin at $0.001 with 100 billion supply ($100M market cap).
| Market Cap | Category | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| >$10B | Large cap (BTC, ETH) | Lower |
| $1-10B | Mid cap | Medium |
| $100M-1B | Small cap | Higher |
| <$100M | Micro cap | Highest |
Trading Volume (24h)
Total value of all trades in the last 24 hours.
Why it matters: High volume means high liquidity — you can buy and sell without moving the price significantly. Low volume means large trades will cause significant price changes.
Red flag: If volume is very low relative to market cap (<1%), the coin is illiquid and hard to trade.
Supply Metrics
- Circulating supply — Coins available to trade
- Total supply — Coins that exist (may include locked/unreleased)
- Max supply — Maximum coins that will ever exist (if capped)
Inflation rate: New coins added per year ÷ circulating supply. Bitcoin has ~1.8% inflation. Some coins have 10-50%+ inflation, which suppresses price.
Fully Diluted Market Cap
Price × Max Supply (if all coins were in circulation).
Why it matters: If a coin has a $1M market cap but a $100M fully diluted market cap, there’s significant dilution coming. The current price may not reflect future supply.
How to Evaluate a Coin
Step 1: Check the Rankings
- Top 10-20 — Established, relatively safe (not risk-free)
- Top 20-100 — Mid-cap, higher risk and reward
- Below 100 — Small-cap, very high risk
Step 2: Check Exchange Availability
- Binance/Coinbase/Kraken listed — Legitimate, some vetting
- Only on Uniswap or small DEXs — No vetting, high scam risk
- Only on one exchange — Possible wash trading
Step 3: Check Project Details
CoinMarketCap’s “Info” tab shows:
- Website, whitepaper, explorers
- Social media links
- Date launched
- Team info (if available)
Step 4: Use CoinGecko’s Trust Score
CoinGecko rates exchanges on transparency, volume, and liquidity. A low trust score means the volume may be fake.
Red Flags on CoinMarketCap
- No website or broken website — Project abandoned
- Anonymous team in 2026 — Legitimate projects have identifiable teams
- Extremely low liquidity — Hard to sell when you want to
- Fresh listing (<30 days) — Rug pull risk is highest early on
- No social media activity — Dead project
- Volume from unknown exchanges — Wash trading suspicion
CoinGecko vs CoinMarketCap
| Feature | CoinMarketCap | CoinGecko |
|---|---|---|
| Data quality | Good, some fake volume | Better (trust score) |
| API | Widely used | More detailed |
| Liquidity info | Basic | Better (decentralized exchange tracking) |
| Developer data | Basic | Excellent (GitHub commits, dev activity) |
| Mobile app | Yes | Yes |
| Portfolio tracking | Yes | Yes |
Which to use: CoinGecko is generally more accurate for evaluating smaller projects. CoinMarketCap is better for quick price checks.
Pro Tips
- Ignore “rank by price” — Price alone tells you nothing. Compare by market cap.
- Check the ATH (All-Time High) — How far is the current price from ATH? Shows market cycle position.
- Watch for “fake volume” — Some exchanges inflate volume 10-100x. CoinGecko’s trust score helps identify this.
- Use the “Recently Added” list — Find new projects (and many scams).
- Check the “Pairs” tab — See which trading pairs the coin has. More pairs = more liquidity.
Verdict
CoinMarketCap and CoinGecko are essential tools, but they’re just starting points. They show what a project claims about itself. Always verify claims on the project’s official channels and do your own research before investing.
Related: How to Research a Crypto Project | Best Crypto Research Tools in 2026 | How to Read a Crypto Whitepaper