Skip to main content
BTC / USDTCRYPTO107,400+2.19%ETH / USDTCRYPTO3,840+2.13%SOL / USDTCRYPTO182.40−1.99%BNB / USDTCRYPTO652.30+0.66%XRP / USDTCRYPTO2.2150+1.61%DOGE / USDTCRYPTO0.3850−1.79%TON / USDTCRYPTO5.240+2.34%AVAX / USDTCRYPTO42.60−2.07%LINK / USDTCRYPTO22.40+2.28%ADA / USDTCRYPTO1.0520−1.68%TRX / USDTCRYPTO0.3300+0.92%DOT / USDTCRYPTO8.420+2.93%BTC / USDTCRYPTO107,400+2.19%ETH / USDTCRYPTO3,840+2.13%SOL / USDTCRYPTO182.40−1.99%BNB / USDTCRYPTO652.30+0.66%XRP / USDTCRYPTO2.2150+1.61%DOGE / USDTCRYPTO0.3850−1.79%TON / USDTCRYPTO5.240+2.34%AVAX / USDTCRYPTO42.60−2.07%LINK / USDTCRYPTO22.40+2.28%ADA / USDTCRYPTO1.0520−1.68%TRX / USDTCRYPTO0.3300+0.92%DOT / USDTCRYPTO8.420+2.93%
定价
cryptoJun 23, 2026, 8:59 PM

Price vs Market Cap: Why 10T Supply Token at $0.00001 Means Little

A token with a 10 trillion supply and a tiny price per coin can still have a massive market cap. The post uses a pizza cutting analogy to explain why price alone is misleading.

A common mistake in crypto is focusing on token price without considering total supply. A token priced at $0.00001 with 10 trillion tokens in circulation may seem cheap, but its market cap is actually $100 million — not trivial.

Think of it like a pizza: cutting it into 4 slices gives large pieces, but cutting the same pizza into 10 trillion crumbs doesn't create more food. Similarly, a high token supply dilutes value. For that 10T supply token to reach $1, the market cap would need to exceed the entire planet's wealth — physically impossible.

Always check the formula: Market Cap = Price × Circulating Supply. That number reveals the real size of the asset, not the per-unit price tag.

Source: Cointelegraph