[New post] Is It A 1000X Moonshot Coin Or A ShitCoin? This Will Save Your Money!
Paschaline Anagor posted: " Now and then, a slew of purportedly 1000X moonshot coins makes their debut on the crypto market. I am sure you're thinking about buying one of them right now. Per"
If the coin is traded on a CEX, for example, you may still use Coinmarketcap to calculate its liquidity.
Go to the liquidity section, there, you will find the liquidity score of a coin's trading pair across various exchanges where it is traded.
This guide will help you to access a liquidity score on Coinmarketcap.
Liquidity pool
Similarly, monitoring a coin's liquidity pool in a DEx is very important.
Check if the liquidity pool has been locked for at least a year or 6 months.
This will save you from falling for a crypto scam known as "rug pull" (more on this later).
Also, ensure that the liquidity pool of the trading pair you are intending to trade is greater than $30,000.
Using PancakeSwap as an example, this tutorial will walk you through the process.
If you are not satisfied with your investigation at the end, then something fishy is going on.
4. What are the recent developments?
This helps you to monitor the community's efforts towards the coin's development.
I will give you 2 tips to go about it:
Look at the coin's source code
Check if the "source code" of your prospective coin is closed or open-source.
If the code is closed-source, this might be a red flag, because cryptocurrency has always been about openness.
However, if it is open-source, you will be able to see if there is any recent development going on with the coin.
Note: You can easily do this on CMC. An open-source coin will lead you to the coin's GitHub and from there you will conduct your research.
Updates
So, how far has the team been regularly keeping the community posted through their blog and social channels?
Are there new updates? Have they achieved any proposals or roadmaps thus far?
Is the Twitter and Telegram account active, or is it overrun with announcements of forthcoming events?
If you did your research and discovered a lag in this aspect, it implies that the team is not making any improvement on the coin, which is a red flag.
5. Team and Whitepaper
How confident are you about the team and are they blockchain inclined?
Make sure you confirm their identities on Linkedin and other social media sites.
If the team is made up of non-techy marketing folks with no blockchain knowledge, this should raise your eyebrows.
Examine the coin's whitepaper as well.
It is a red flag if:
The coin has no whitepaper
If the whitepaper is ambiguous and meaningless
If it has several grammatical errors
6. What is the project behind the coin, and does it even require a coin?
Many projects have created cryptocurrency for farmers, poverty alleviation, social media points, and so on.
But are these tokens even solving a problem?
If a coin lacks a use-case or it is only used for staking, then maybe you are about to put your money in a shitcoin.
The reason is simple: a cryptocurrency's value is determined by its use cases, and staking is not one of them.
7. Roadmap and Partnership
A project's roadmap should give you a clue of how the team intends to achieve mass adoption of their coin.
But, if the roadmap is not worthwhile and they have failed to achieve it as claimed, then it raises a red signal.
Good instances of crypto projects that consistently changed their roadmap to their demise are Factom, Paycoin, and a whole lot of others.
More so, you need to check the company's acclaimed partnerships.
Are they genuine or just a marketing ploy? If the partnership is not as solid and significant as they portray it to be, then you should feel suspicious.
This post will give you more insight into what I am talking about.
8. Hype and Market Gimmicks
You should be extremely cautious of coins whose value is influenced by hype.
Particularly noteworthy are crypto projects that pay top social media influencers and celebrities for marketing stunts.
The worst are the sock puppets, making spamming and misleading comments about a coin.
This should be a red flag. Obviously, once the hype has worn off, you can only imagine how this coin will dump on you.
Offers like this should immediately make you feel suspicious.
You are still here? Good!
In the next section, I will walk you through how you can spot a real gem coin.
Should I Invest In A Shitcoin?
Investing in a shitcoin comes with high risk.
This is because there is a possibility of losing your entire investment.
Fairly, the majority of altcoins especially the new low-cap ones are shitcoins.
However, certain new low-cap altcoins are still hot gems.
Now, these coins might have shown one or two signs of some of the shortcomings mentioned above.
But, they should not be dismissed as a shitcoin right away.
For example, it doesn't really make it a shitcoin, if a token that was launched a few months ago is yet to be listed on a CEx like Binance.
If you must invest in a shitcoin, I will be giving you 5 approaches to go about it.
Go through the strategies listed above. This will help you to know where to place the coin
If you deem the coin a shitcoin, but want to take the chance, then you should not invest more than $5 into the coin for the first 1 or 2 months.
Be willing to lose some money as well. But try and limit your loses by choosing a token with a less gas fee, for instance the tokens that are built on the BSC network.
However, keep in mind that because you have decided to take this risk, the outcome will be two things:
You may either be one of the few persons that will make profit when the shitcoin pumps or one of the majority that will accumulate loses when it dumps.
Or your shitcoin isn't what it appears to be, but a hidden 1000x moonshotcoin which you happen to be an early adopter.
Now, before I end this section, there are a few things I will like to clarify.
Simply because a token's price has risen exponentially does not imply that it is a gem.
Also, most exchanges that you actually deem legit, may list a shitcoin just to delist it later.
So, don't go on thinking that all coins listed on reputable exchanges are not shitcoins.
Also, a coin might be a shitcoin today but might end up gaining traction and some real-world use cases in the future, e.g. Dogecoin.
But to be on the right track, make sure that the coin you plan to hodl for the long term has at least, one or two real-world use cases. Not financial advice!
FAQ
1. What are rug pulls and Honeypots?
These are terms used to describe scam shitcoins. I will be explaining the 2 terms one by one.
- Rugpull: This happens when the developers of a coin unlock the liquidity pool of a coin after investors must have bought their coin. If this should happen, the developers will flee with investors funds, If this occurs, the creators will flee with the cash of the investors, rendering the coin worthless forever
- Honeypots: This happens when the coin's developers use a smart contract that allows only their wallet to withdraw from a coin. In other words, you can buy this coin but you will not be able to sell it for profit.
You can find more details about these two terms here.
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