As of mid-December 2025 snapshots, AT is trading around the $0.08–$0.10 zone across major trackers (CoinGecko shows about $0.0848; CoinMarketCap and Coinbase show similar ballpark at different timestamps).  The striking part isn’t the exact penny—it’s how close that is to the floor these sites are now printing as “all-time low” territory in mid-December.

The drawdown math is brutal and easy to verify. CoinGecko records an ATH around $0.8594 on Oct 24, 2025, and shows AT now about 90% below that peak; using the $0.0848 snapshot, that’s roughly -90.13% from ATH.  CoinMarketCap’s ATH print is in the same neighborhood (around $0.8801 on Oct 24, 2025) and also reports an ~-89% drawdown.  Either way, the story is the same: AT went from “headline candle” to “post-hype compression” in about seven weeks.

Volatility shows up not just in percent drops, but in the ranges. CoinGecko’s recent bands put the 7-day range roughly $0.084–$0.129 and the 24-hour range roughly $0.084–$0.096, with the historical low flagged around Dec 15, 2025 near $0.0844.  That’s a market that’s still swinging hard, but inside a much lower price box than it had in late October.

What makes AT especially “crypto-ish” is the volume profile versus its size. Coinbase shows ~$25.19M 24h volume against a ~$20.54M market cap (volume-to-market-cap ≈ 1.23x in that snapshot), and it also prints $191M (7D) and $840M (30D) volume.  CoinMarketCap similarly shows 24h volume often at or above the market cap (Vol/Mkt Cap ~113% in one snapshot).  That pattern usually means two things at once: plenty of attention/liquidity for a small cap, and a market dominated by short-horizon flows (rotation, speculation, hedging), not sleepy long-term holding.

Supply structure helps explain why AT can feel “light” and “heavy” at the same time. Multiple trackers converge on 1B max supply and roughly ~230–250M circulating (about a quarter of max), which implies a meaningful gap between market cap and FDV (Coinbase shows ~$20.5M mcap vs ~$82M FDV).  In plain terms: the boat is small on the water today, but there’s a much bigger boat still on the dock—so price can jump sharply on hype and also sag sharply when the crowd thins.

On “correlation to broader narratives,” the cleanest honest read—without pretending I computed a full rolling Pearson matrix here—is that AT is being categorized and traded like a narrative bundle token(AI + oracles + DeFi). Coinbase tags it under ai-big-data / defi / oracles (and related tags), and CoinMarketCap also classifies it under AI & Big Data and DeFi-oriented groupings.  When a token sits at the intersection of multiple hot narratives, it often behaves like a “beta sponge”: it can pump harder when the theme is trending, then mean-revert harder when attention rotates elsewhere—exactly what the Oct-to-Dec arc looks like.

If you want to quantify the “narrative correlation” properly (and make it CreatorPad-grade), the best trader-style method is simple: pull daily closes for AT, BTC, and a basket like LINK/PYTH/API3 plus an AI basket, then compute 30-day rolling correlation and 30-day realized volatility (stdev of daily returns × √365). Even without doing that full computation here, you can already anchor one hard comparative hint from Coinbase’s relative-performance panel: AT is shown sharply down versus the broader market and versus BTC/ETH over the displayed window (on the order of the high-80% range).  That’s consistent with “small-cap narrative token with high beta”: it tends to underperform majors badly in risk-off phases and only outperforms when the theme is aggressively bid.

One more concrete “volume anatomy” detail worth adding: CoinGecko points to AT/USDT on Binanceas the most active pair and lists other venues like Toobit/Ourbit in its market summary.  For your passage, that matters because it tells readers where the liquidity gravity is—and where whale flows and liquidation cascades are most likely to originate when volatility spikes.

@APRO Oracle $AT #APRO