If $BOB = $0.000042, then:
$23 buys you about:
23 / 0.000042 ≈ 547,619 BOB tokens
Now if BOB ever reaches a $1,000,000 portfolio value, your holdings would need to be worth
$1M:
Required price per token:
1,000,000 / 547,619 ≈ $1.83 per BOB
That’s the real target price needed.
Now the critical reality check:
If price = $1.83 and supply stays fixed, market cap becomes:
Market cap = price × circulating supply
Even with a “modest” supply of 10B tokens:
→ $18.3 billion market cap
So the idea that:
“$1M portfolio = $1B market cap = $0.42 price”
doesn’t align mathematically. Those numbers contradict each other.
The bigger point (important):
Meme coins can run hard in cycles, but:
Getting from micro-cap to multi-billion valuation requires massive liquidity
Early holders don’t all exit at peak prices (demand + timing matters)
“$23 → $1M” implies extreme multiples that are statistically rare, not normal-cycle outcomes
Bottom line:
The upside math looks exciting on paper, but the missing variable is always liquidity + market cap reality, not just token price.
If you want, I can rewrite your post into a more “viral but mathematically correct” version that still keeps the hype tone.
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