Token Competitors

Compare a token’s valuation and float against its peers

This feature is only available to Pro users.

Overview

Competitor Analysis helps you put a token’s valuation into context. Instead of looking at market cap or fully diluted value (FDV) in isolation, this tool compares these metrics against a group of similar tokens while also accounting for float (the percentage of tokens already released).

This allows you to see whether a project looks undervalued, overvalued, or fairly positioned relative to its peers.

Accessing Competitor Analysis

You’ll find Competitor Analysis inside every token page. The analysis is available in two views: a scatter plot that highlights float classifications and a bar chart that provides a direct comparison of FDV and market cap across tokens.

Using Competitor Analysis

The scatter plot shows Market Cap versus FDV, layered with diagonal float bands.

Tokens plotted along the diagonal lines are trading in line with their release progress, while those above or below may be over or undervalued relative to float. E.g., a token sitting in the “low float” band with a high market cap may face dilution risk as more supply comes into circulation.

The bar chart presents a straightforward visual comparison of valuations.

It complements the scatter plot by stripping away float and simply ranking tokens by FDV and market cap. Reference lines for sector averages make it easy to see where a project sits compared to the broader group, and the detailed valuation panel below provides precise numbers for each metric.

Both views include interactive tooltips, sector average markers, and the ability to download the dataset for deeper work.

Why It Matters

Looking at a token’s valuation in isolation can be misleading, but by comparing it against peers, you get a clearer sense of where it stands. Competitor Analysis helps surface three critical insights:

  1. Whether a token’s valuation aligns with its release schedule

  2. Whether it trades above or below sector averages

  3. Where risks of dilution or opportunities for undervaluation might lie.

This makes it easier to separate hype from substance.

Where To Next?

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