What Is Market Cap in Crypto? A Beginner’s Guide
από LCX Team ·
If you’ve spent any time exploring the world of cryptocurrency, you’ve almost certainly come across the term market cap. It appears on every major crypto tracking site, gets mentioned in conversations about whether a coin is “big” or “small,” and is frequently used to compare projects. But what does it actually mean and why does it matter?
Let’s break it down from the ground up.
The Basic Formula
Market capitalization or market cap is straightforward to calculate:
Market Cap = Current Price × Circulating Supply
That’s it. If a token is trading at $2.00 and there are 500 million tokens currently in circulation, the market cap is $1 billion.
Market cap doesn’t tell you how much money has been invested in a project. It tells you the total dollar value of all tokens currently circulating, at the current price. This is an important distinction beginners often miss.
Circulating Supply vs. Total Supply vs. Max Supply
This is where things get a little more nuanced and where a lot of confusion happens.
Circulating Supply is the number of tokens that are currently available and actively trading in the open market. This is the figure used in the market cap formula above. Tokens that are locked, vesting, or not yet released are not included.
Total Supply is the total number of tokens that currently exist including those that are locked or reserved, but excluding any that have been permanently destroyed (burned). Think of it as the full count of tokens created so far.
Max Supply is the hard cap on how many tokens will ever exist. Not all cryptocurrencies have a max supply. Bitcoin, for example, has a max supply of 21 million BTC no more will ever be created after that threshold is reached. Other projects have no defined cap, meaning new tokens can theoretically be issued indefinitely.
Understanding these three figures together gives you a much clearer picture of a token’s economics:
- A low circulating supply with a high total supply may signal that many tokens are still to be released, which could create future selling pressure.
- A capped max supply can indicate built-in scarcity, similar to how gold has a finite amount in the earth.
- A project with no max supply isn’t necessarily bad, but it does mean inflation is possible.
Why Market Cap Matters
Market cap is commonly used to categorize projects by size:
- Large-cap (generally $10B+): Established projects with high liquidity and wider adoption. Considered relatively more stable within the volatile crypto landscape.
- Mid-cap ($1B–$10B): Growing projects with meaningful adoption but more risk and potential upside.
- Small-cap (under $1B): Earlier-stage projects with higher risk and higher potential reward.
These categories aren’t official, they’re general reference points the community uses to benchmark projects against one another.
What Else Market Cap Can Tell You
Market cap becomes even more powerful when you pair it with a few related concepts.
One of the most useful is Fully Diluted Valuation (FDV). While market cap only accounts for tokens currently in circulation, FDV calculates the theoretical total value of every token that will ever exist were already in circulation. Comparing market cap to FDV gives you a sense of how much of the total supply is already out in the market and how much is still to come. A project where the market cap and FDV are close together suggests most tokens are already circulating, while a large gap simply means more tokens will enter the market over time as part of the project’s planned release schedule.
Another helpful metric to combine with market cap is trading volume. If a project has a strong market cap and consistently healthy daily trading volume, it suggests genuine interest and active participation from the market. Volume gives market cap context, it shows the market cap is being supported by real activity.
It’s also worth understanding token unlock schedules. Many projects release tokens gradually over time — to early investors, teams, or ecosystem funds, according to a predetermined vesting schedule. These are publicly available and reading them helps you understand the broader token economy, not just today’s snapshot.
Finally, consider using market cap to compare projects within the same sector. Benchmarking a DeFi project against other DeFi projects, or a layer-1 blockchain against its peers, gives you a much more meaningful comparison than looking at market cap in isolation across entirely different categories.
If you’d like to see how these concepts apply to a real project, the LCX token is worth exploring as a case study.
