====== Circulating Supply ====== Circulating Supply is a term primarily used in the world of [[cryptocurrency]] to describe the number of coins or tokens that are publicly available and actively trading on the market. Think of it as the pool of assets that you or I could actually buy or sell right now. This figure is crucial because it represents the "effective" supply that determines an asset's price in the open market. It intentionally excludes tokens that are locked, held in reserve by the project's founders or foundation, or have not yet been mined or released according to a predetermined schedule. Understanding this concept is the first step to accurately gauging the real-world valuation of any digital asset. ===== Why Does Circulating Supply Matter? ===== Simply put, Circulating Supply is the number that matters most for calculating a cryptocurrency's present-day value. It provides a much more realistic snapshot of an asset's market dynamics than other supply metrics. ==== The True Measure of Scarcity ==== While other metrics exist, Circulating Supply is your best guide to current scarcity. It's often compared against two other key figures: * **Total Supply:** This is the total number of coins that have been created (or "minted") so far, minus any coins that have been verifiably burned (permanently destroyed). It includes the circulating supply //plus// any locked tokens. * **Max Supply:** This is the absolute maximum number of coins that will ever be created for that cryptocurrency. For assets like [[Bitcoin]], this is hard-coded to a fixed number (21 million). For others, there may be no maximum supply. Imagine a pizza. The **Max Supply** is the fact that the recipe can only ever make one 8-slice pizza. The **Total Supply** is the 8 slices that have been cut. But if the chef is holding back 4 slices for later, the **Circulating Supply** is only the 4 slices actually on the table for people to eat. The price per slice will be determined by the demand for those 4 available slices, not all 8. ==== Calculating Market Cap Accurately ==== The most common use of Circulating Supply is to calculate [[Market Capitalization]] (or "market cap"), a foundational metric for comparing the relative size of different cryptocurrencies. The formula is simple: **Market Capitalization = Circulating Supply x Current Price per Coin** Using the Total Supply instead would give you a misleadingly high valuation. For example, if a project has 10 million tokens in Total Supply but only 2 million are circulating, and the price is $5, its true market cap is $10 million (2 million x $5). An investor who mistakenly uses Total Supply would calculate a $50 million market cap, potentially leading them to believe the asset is five times larger and more established than it actually is. ===== A Value Investor's Perspective ===== For a [[value investor]], Circulating Supply isn't just a number to plug into a formula; it's a starting point for deeper investigation. The real insight comes from understanding the //difference// between the circulating and total supply. ==== Digging into the Details ==== A savvy investor asks: Where are the non-circulating tokens, and when do they enter circulation? These locked-up tokens represent potential future supply. The answers can reveal a lot about a project's long-term health and potential risks: * **Team & Advisor Allocations:** Are large amounts of tokens held by the founding team? If so, what is their vesting schedule? A short vesting period could mean the team can cash out early, potentially crashing the price. * **Foundation Reserves:** Many projects have a foundation that holds tokens for ecosystem development, marketing, or partnerships. Transparency around how these funds are used is critical. * **Staking & Treasury:** Tokens might be locked in [[smart contracts]] for [[staking]] rewards or held in a community-controlled treasury. ==== Understanding Future Dilution ==== The key concern for a value investor is [[dilution]]. Just as a company issuing millions of new shares dilutes the value for existing stockholders, a cryptocurrency that releases a flood of new tokens onto the market can suppress its price. Before investing, you must analyze the project's [[tokenomics]] and release schedule. A great value investor will always ask: * What is the token release schedule for the next one, three, and five years? * What is the asset's [[inflation]] rate from new token creation (e.g., through [[mining]] or staking)? * Is there a "token cliff," a specific date when a massive number of locked tokens are released at once? This can be a major red flag. ===== A Word of Caution ===== While essential, the Circulating Supply figure is not always perfect. Data can be inconsistent across different tracking websites, as some projects may self-report their numbers. Always verify data from multiple reputable sources (like CoinMarketCap, CoinGecko, or directly from a blockchain explorer). Ultimately, Circulating Supply is just one piece of the complex puzzle of investment analysis. It provides no information about a project's utility, technical strength, or competitive advantages. Use it as a critical tool for valuation, but never in isolation.