Market cap and supply
- Market cap
- $354.21K
- 24h volume
- $53.45K
- Circulating supply
- 237.79M
- Total supply
- 299.79M
- CFR score
- 15
Market cap and supply
Market Cap, 24h Volume, and Supply (Circulating, Total, and Max) are essential metrics that provide deeper insight into a cryptocurrency's size, liquidity, and future supply dynamics—far beyond just looking at price alone.
Market capitalization (market cap) is calculated as the current price multiplied by the circulating supply (the number of coins or tokens actively available and tradable in the market). It represents the total dollar value of all circulating units, giving a sense of the project's overall size and relative importance in the crypto ecosystem. Larger market caps (e.g., Bitcoin or Ethereum) often indicate more established, potentially less volatile assets with broader adoption, while smaller ones may offer higher growth potential but come with greater risk.
24h trading volume measures the total value of a cryptocurrency bought and sold across exchanges in the last 24 hours. High volume signals strong interest, good liquidity (easier to buy/sell without big price swings), and active market participation—making it a key indicator of momentum or health. Low volume can mean thin trading, higher manipulation risk, or lack of interest, so comparing volume to market cap (e.g., a healthy ratio often >1-5%) helps spot sustainable trends versus hype-driven pumps.
Supply types reveal scarcity and potential dilution:
• Circulating supply — coins currently in public hands and tradable (used for market cap).
• Total supply — all coins created so far, including locked/vested ones not yet circulating.
• Max supply — the hard cap on how many will ever exist (e.g., Bitcoin's 21 million limit creates scarcity; Ethereum has no fixed max).
For new investors, these metrics together help evaluate real value versus hype: a high market cap with strong volume suggests stability, while understanding supply differences prevents surprises from future unlocks or inflation that could pressure price downward. Always cross-reference them—price alone can mislead, but combining these paints a clearer picture of opportunity, risk, and long-term potential in the volatile crypto space.
About Cortex
Cortex is built on a new public chain called Cortex. The chain includes AI algorithms that support smart contracts, which means anyone can use Cortex to add AI to their smart contracts. It also creates an incentive mechanism for collective collaboration, allowing anyone to submit and optimize models in Cortex, while model contributors can also be rewarded. The end result of Cortex, according to the whitepaper, is the creation of “artificial general intelligence”, or AGI, “being born on the Cortex”. Cortex completed a private token sale in February/March 2018 for its CTXC tokens. That funding round was led by Bitmain and FBG Capital, among other well-known investors in the cryptocurrency space. Placing artificial intelligence systems on the blockchain isn’t a straightforward process. However, Cortex will solve this problem by allowing machine learning researchers around the world to upload well-trained corresponding data models to the storage layer of the Cortex public chain. Other users who need these AI models can make inferences using the models, then pay the person who developed those models. At each inference, a full node synchronizes the model and the data from the storage tier to the local site. Making an inference using Cortex’s unique virtual machine, or CVM, will synchronize the results to the whole network and then return the result. Every time a user initiates a transaction on the Cortex, opens a smart contract, or performs an intelligence inference, the user will need to pay a certain number of “Endorphin” tokens. Endorphin is the pricing unit for transactions on Cortex. However, the platform will have two tokens, including Endorphins and Cortex Coins (CTXC). The overall goal of Cortex is to provide state-of-the-art machine learning models on the blockchain where users can infer using smart contracts. Cortex also seeks to create a machine learning platform where users can post tasks on the platform or submit artificial intelligence-based decentralized apps. Cortex’s token sale began with a single private placement round. That round took place from February 7 to March 7, 2018, during which tokens were sold at a price of 1 ETH = 1500 CTXC. In March 2018, the company announced that it had reached its target cap of 40,000 ETH for 60 million CTXC, or 20.01% of the total token distribution. FBG Capital and Bitmain were lead investors during the token sale. CTXC tokens are ERC20 tokens on the Ethereum blockchain. There’s a total supply of 299,792,458 tokens. Of the total supply, 50.03% (150 million) are reserved for Cortex coin miners as a mining reward, 24.95% (74,792,458) are dedicated to the project’s foundation from the genesis block (including 15.01% to the Cortex Lab, 9.01% to project marketing, and 0.93% to challenge bounties), with the remaining 5% going to advisors, academia, and the community from the genesis block. Cortex aims to place advanced artificial intelligence systems on the blockchain. The company recently completed a private investment round during its token sale for CTXC tokens in February/March 2018. The next step is to roll out the Cortex public chain. Key features of the platform include its smart AI contracts and its Cortex Virtual Machine, both of which allow for advanced AI-based smart contract programming.
Links and resources
Socials
Social accounts
Social accounts (primarily official profiles on platforms like X/Twitter, Telegram, Discord, Reddit, and sometimes others) for a cryptocurrency project serve as the main direct communication channels between the team, developers, and the community of holders, users, and potential investors.
These accounts are important because they provide real-time updates on project developments—such as partnerships, technical upgrades, roadmap milestones, audits, token unlocks, or market announcements—that aren't always immediately reflected in price charts or on-chain data. Following them helps new investors stay informed about what's actually happening inside the project, beyond hype or speculation, allowing better assessment of progress, transparency, and long-term viability.
A strong, active, and engaged social presence often signals legitimacy and community health: genuine projects build trust through consistent interaction, AMAs (Ask Me Anything sessions), developer responses, and organic growth. High engagement can indicate real interest and adoption potential, while weak or inactive channels might raise red flags about abandonment or poor management.
Crucially, verifying official social accounts is a key part of due diligence to avoid scams—fake accounts, impersonators, or phishing links frequently appear on social media promising giveaways, airdrops, or "double your crypto" schemes that steal funds or private keys. Always cross-check links from the project's website or trusted sources (e.g., CoinMarketCap, CoinGecko listings) rather than clicking random mentions.
For beginners, monitoring these channels educates you on crypto culture, sentiment, and narratives that can influence price movements in this sentiment-driven market. It empowers informed decisions, reduces FOMO-driven mistakes, and helps spot genuine opportunities versus risky hype—ultimately protecting your investment and building smarter, more confident participation in the space.
Docs
Official docs and websites
Official docs and websites (including the project's main website, whitepaper, technical documentation, and roadmap pages) represent the most authoritative and direct sources of information straight from the development team or foundation behind a cryptocurrency.
These resources are critically important for new investors because they offer the deepest, most accurate insights into what the project actually aims to achieve, how it works technically, its tokenomics (supply, distribution, utility), governance model, team backgrounds, and planned milestones—details often missing or distorted on third-party sites, social media, or hype-driven forums.
The whitepaper (a detailed technical document, famously pioneered by Bitcoin's in 2008) acts as the project's "blueprint": it explains the problem being solved, the proposed blockchain solution, consensus mechanism, economic incentives, and potential real-world applications. Reading it helps you evaluate whether the idea has genuine innovation and feasibility, spot unrealistic promises or copied content (common in scams), and assess long-term viability rather than short-term price pumps.
The official website serves as the central hub: it typically hosts the whitepaper, links to verified social channels, team bios, audit reports, legal disclosures, and updates—allowing you to verify legitimacy and cross-check claims. Legitimate projects maintain transparent, professional sites with clear navigation, while shady ones often have poor design, broken links, plagiarized content, or anonymous teams.
For beginners, prioritizing these official sources is a cornerstone of due diligence—it protects against misinformation, rug pulls, and pump-and-dump schemes that thrive on social hype. Many experienced investors won't touch a project without a solid whitepaper and transparent docs, as they provide accountability (you can later compare progress against stated goals). By starting here instead of price charts or influencer tweets, you build a foundation of understanding, make more rational decisions, and significantly reduce risk in this high-stakes, unregulated space. Always access them directly via bookmarked links or trusted aggregators like CryptoFaxReport, never random search results or unsolicited messages.
Explorers
Blockchain explorers
Blockchain explorer links (such as Etherscan for Ethereum, BscScan for BNB Chain, Blockchain.com for Bitcoin, Solscan for Solana, or similar tools specific to each network) are public web-based tools that act like a "search engine" or transparent ledger viewer for the blockchain, allowing anyone to look up and analyze on-chain data in real time.
These links are extremely important for new crypto investors because blockchain technology is built on transparency—every transaction, wallet balance, token transfer, smart contract interaction, and block is permanently recorded and publicly verifiable. Explorers give you direct access to this raw, tamper-proof data straight from the blockchain itself, independent of exchanges, wallets, or project claims.
Key reasons they matter include:
• Verify transactions — After sending or receiving crypto, paste your transaction ID (TXID) or wallet address to confirm it processed, see confirmations, fees paid, and final status—crucial to avoid anxiety during network congestion or delays.
• Check wallet activity and token holdings — Input a project's treasury wallet, developer addresses, or your own to monitor fund movements, detect large dumps (e.g., by "whales"), or spot suspicious outflows that could signal a rug pull or exit scam.
• Audit smart contracts and tokenomics — View contract code (if verified), holder distribution, total transfers, and burn events to assess legitimacy, decentralization, and whether supply claims match reality—helping spot red flags like hidden minting functions.
• Perform basic on-chain analysis — Track metrics like transaction volume, active addresses, gas fees, or whale behavior to gauge real adoption, network health, and potential price catalysts beyond social hype or exchange listings.
• Enhance security and due diligence — Cross-check addresses before interacting (e.g., to avoid phishing scams or fake contracts), and use explorers to verify what third-party sites or apps show you.
For beginners, relying on official explorer links (found on the project's website or trusted aggregators like CryptoFaxReport) empowers you to move from blind trust to informed verification. In crypto's trustless environment, where scams abound and "not your keys, not your crypto" applies, explorers are your window into the truth on-chain—reducing risk, building confidence, and teaching core blockchain principles through hands-on exploration. Always use reputable explorers, bookmark them, and never enter private keys or seed phrases on any site.
Social Media
Top influencers
This list highlights creators who are getting the most engagement around this asset on major social platforms—ranked by recent interactions, not by whether their takes are correct.
For someone new to crypto, that matters because narratives and personalities often move attention (and sometimes price) faster than fundamentals. Seeing who is loud helps you notice hype cycles, coordinated campaigns, or sudden spikes in interest that might not show up in a price chart alone. It is not a recommendation to follow or trust anyone here: high reach can mean education, entertainment, or promotion. Treat names as context—then verify claims against official sources, on-chain data, and your own research. Popularity is not proof of accuracy.
Social posts
These are recent public posts that mention this asset's topic—think of it as a live pulse of what people are saying, arguing about, or sharing right now.
If you are new to crypto, that is useful because markets are partly driven by sentiment, memes, and breaking news on social channels. Scanning this feed helps you spot themes (bullish hype, fear, regulatory chatter, technical debates) and understand the mood around the coin—not to copy trades from strangers. Posts are not fact-checked here; anyone can be wrong, exaggerate, or have a financial incentive. Use this section to stay aware of the conversation, then cross-check anything important with trusted news, project docs, and data before you act.
Market indicators
Fear and Greed
The Fear and Greed Index is a popular sentiment indicator that measures the overall emotional state of the cryptocurrency market—primarily Bitcoin-driven—on a scale from 0 to 100. A score near 0 signals Extreme Fear (investors are panicking, selling off assets, often during sharp downturns), while a score near 100 indicates Extreme Greed (euphoric buying, FOMO, and over-optimism during bull runs). It aggregates multiple data points like volatility, market momentum/volume, social media sentiment, Bitcoin dominance, Google Trends searches, and surveys to produce a single, easy-to-read number updated daily.
This index is important for new crypto investors because the crypto market is heavily influenced by psychology and emotion rather than traditional fundamentals alone—fear can cause massive sell-offs that push prices below "fair" value (creating buying opportunities), while greed inflates bubbles that lead to painful corrections. Famous investor wisdom like Warren Buffett's "Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful" applies perfectly here: extreme fear often marks market bottoms (good times to accumulate if fundamentals are strong), and extreme greed frequently precedes tops (a signal to take profits or be cautious).
For beginners, it serves as a contrarian tool to counter emotional biases—helping you avoid panic-selling at lows or chasing hype at highs. It promotes disciplined, long-term thinking in a volatile space where sentiment swings amplify price moves. While not a perfect predictor (it can stay extreme for extended periods), combining it with other metrics (price, volume, on-chain data) gives a fuller picture of market health and potential turning points. Track it on trusted sites like CryptoFaxReport, but always pair sentiment analysis with your own research—it's a gauge of crowd behavior, not investment advice.
Altcoin Index
The Altcoin Season Index measures whether altcoins (cryptocurrencies other than Bitcoin) are outperforming Bitcoin over a 90-day window. The index ranges from 0 to 100: below 25 is "Bitcoin Season" (BTC leading), 25–75 is mixed or neutral, and above 75 is "Altcoin Season" (altcoins leading). It helps investors see when capital is rotating into or out of Bitcoin versus the rest of the market—useful for timing diversification into alts or into BTC.
Market Heatmap
The Market Heatmap shows cryptocurrencies as rectangles sized by market capitalization (larger cap = larger tile) and colored by their 24-hour percentage price change. Red tiles indicate negative performance, grey indicates little or no change, and green indicates positive performance. This gives you a quick visual overview of which assets dominate by size and how the market is moving at a glance. Use it alongside other metrics—it does not predict future performance.