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I've been diving deeper into FDV lately and realized most people are using it wrong, treating it like a magical number when it's really just a risk warning tool.
Let me break this down simply. FDV stands for Fully Diluted Valuation - basically what happens when all those locked tokens finally hit the market. It's calculated by multiplying current price by total token supply, not just what's circulating right now.
Here's where it gets interesting. Take SUI as a real example. Current price is $0.92 with 4B tokens circulating out of 10B total. So market cap sits around $3.7B, but FDV is actually $9.25B. That's a massive gap - meaning 60% of tokens are still locked up waiting to be released. If you ignore this and just look at the low market cap, you're walking straight into a trap.
The problem is that FDV gets misunderstood as a valuation metric when it's actually a dilution indicator. A high FDV doesn't mean the project is undervalued - it means there's serious selling pressure coming. When early investors and team members start unlocking their tokens, if demand doesn't match that supply, the price gets crushed. We saw this with STRK in 2024 when unlocks sent the price from $2.5 down to $0.04 - that's devastating.
I use the MC to FDV ratio as my personal filter now. If it's above 0.8, like BTC at 99.9% or ETH close to full circulation, there's minimal future dilution risk. Between 0.6-0.8 is medium risk, acceptable for established projects. But anything below 0.3? That's where you need to be extremely careful. HYPE is trading at only 23.84% circulation with an FDV of $39.64B - sounds like a discount until you realize what happens when the rest unlocks.
XRP is another interesting case. Currently at $1.40 with 61.8B circulating against 100B total. That's an MC to FDV ratio of about 62%, meaning 38% of supply is still locked. The FDV sits at $139.48B, which tells you the project has serious room for dilution if market conditions don't stay strong.
What I've learned is that comparing FDV across projects in the same category actually makes sense. DeFi protocols like Uniswap peaked at $45B FDV in 2021 but are now around $2.91B. Layer 1s like Solana hit $130B at peak but are at $52.64B now. These benchmarks help you understand if current FDV is reasonable for the market cycle we're in.
The real skill is combining FDV analysis with token unlock schedules. Check when the next major unlock happens, assess whether market demand can absorb that supply, and honestly evaluate if the project has real use cases beyond hype. If you see a project with low circulation, high FDV, and no clear product-market fit, that's your signal to stay away regardless of how cheap the market cap looks.
I've started using tools like Tokenomist to map out unlock schedules before making moves. It takes five minutes but saves you from getting caught in the classic low MC, high FDV trap that catches so many new investors.
The takeaway: FDV isn't a valuation tool, it's a risk meter. Use it to identify which projects have manageable dilution ahead and which ones are sitting on time bombs. That's how you actually use it to avoid getting rekt.