How are the feasibility thresholds determined?
Thresholds are based on historical market behavior, including how often assets have exceeded certain percentages of Bitcoin’s market capitalization.
Does this analysis predict future prices?
No. This analysis does not make predictions. It evaluates whether a target price is mathematically feasible based on relative market capitalization.
What benchmarks are used for comparison?
Benchmark assets typically include Bitcoin, Ethereum, major equities, and global commodities such as gold and silver. These benchmarks provide context for relative valuation.
Why does market capitalization matter more than price?
Price alone does not reflect the size of an asset. Market capitalization provides a standardized way to compare different assets by accounting for supply.
How is the target market capitalization calculated?
The target market capitalization is calculated by multiplying the target price by the circulating token supply at the time of analysis.
Can market conditions change these results?
Yes. Changes in circulating supply, benchmark asset valuations, or broader market growth can affect the outcome.
Does this calculation include fully diluted supply?
By default, calculations use circulating supply. Fully diluted supply may produce different results and is not always representative of current market conditions.
Is this analysis investment advice?
No. This content is purely informational and based on mathematical comparisons. It does not consider individual financial circumstances.
Why do different assets have different results at the same price?
Because circulating supply varies significantly between assets, the same price can imply very different market capitalizations.
Why compare crypto assets to stocks or commodities?
Comparing across asset classes helps contextualize scale and assess whether a valuation would exceed historically significant markets.
What does “possible,” “uncertain,” or “impossible” mean?
These labels are based on how large the target market cap is relative to established benchmark assets, using predefined percentage thresholds derived from historical data.
Has any asset ever exceeded 10% of Bitcoin’s market cap?
Yes, but only in rare cases. Ethereum and a small number of other assets briefly exceeded this level during specific market cycles.