See who has coin, their wallet balance, how long they're holding, what time they enter the market, and who they trade with — all in one page.
Real-time snapshot of your counterparties. Balances, hold times, market entry, and trading patterns — all in one view.
$3.17M
Total Supply
4 / 6
Loaded
3.2 hrs
Avg Hold
| Trader | Balance | Status | Holding For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Emeka O. | $1,240,000 | Loaded | 2h 14m |
| Kola A. | $890,000 | Fresh | 45m |
| Chidi N. | $520,000 | Holding | 5h 30m |
| Tunde B. | $0 | Dry | — |
| Segun D. | $340,000 | Stagnant | 18h 45m |
| Bola K. | $175,000 | Fresh | 1h 10m |
Simulated data with fictional names. Your supply meter shows your own watchlist.
If a trader loads their wallet early in the morning and holds, they're likely waiting for more buyers to come to the market to sell at a better price.
If it's 2-3 PM and they're still holding the same balance since morning, rates probably passed them. They're waiting for a recovery that may not come.
The average cycle shows how long it takes a trader from when they load to when they start selling. A short cycle means they fill orders fast.
The average hold time reveals their typical behavior. Compare today's hold to their average — if they're holding longer than usual, something is different.
Before Supply Meter, a trader would wake up and start selling coin without checking the market. By noon, rates hadn't moved. By 2 PM, he was buying back at a loss.
Now, he checks the Supply Meter first thing in the morning. If his counterparts are all holding heavy since the night before, he knows they're waiting for a pump — so he holds too.
If he sees most wallets are dry and one person just loaded fresh at 7 AM, he knows that person is about to start selling. He positions himself accordingly.
Supply Meter turned blind trading into informed trading.
Your supply meter updates in real time. See the market before you trade.
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