What aBTC is
aBTC is a digital asset, currently ranked 201st by market capitalization among the assets we track. aBTC is a digital asset that trades across crypto exchanges alongside hundreds of other tokens. Its specific role is best understood from its own documentation, since it doesn't fit neatly into a single well-defined category.
aBTC (ABTC) is a cryptocurrency designed to facilitate seamless transactions on the network while ensuring high security and scalability. It aims to provide users with a stable and efficient means of transferring value in the digital economy.
How to approach aBTC
Where a clean archetype is missing, the honest approach is to lean on observable facts: how it trades, how much supply exists, and what the project documents about its design.
Background & fundamentals
In sector terms it is most often filed under Aptos Ecosystem.
Where aBTC sits in the market
With ABTC near $53,528, aBTC carries a market capitalization of $134.78M. Around $1.09K changes hands across exchanges in a typical 24-hour window. That is a turnover of about 0.00% of the float — on the quieter side, which can mean thinner liquidity for large orders.
aBTC carries no fixed maximum supply; issuance follows a programmatic schedule rather than a hard cap. The token is roughly -58% under its record of $126,013 — a meaningful but not catastrophic drawdown.
What the price history shows
Across timeframes, ABTC shows 24-hour +0.16%.
Volatility profile
Recent action puts aBTC in the Low-volatility band — it has been relatively stable, with moves typical of large-cap, mature assets.
How to evaluate aBTC
For an asset of this type, three lenses matter most:
- Liquidity — how deep and reliable trading in ABTC is across venues.
- Supply dynamics — circulating versus maximum supply and the resulting dilution path.
- Documentation — what the project itself claims, since standardized sector data is limited here.
This page pulls live market data, on-chain stats where available, exchange-by-exchange volume, and our forecast model into one view so you can work through those questions in a single place. None of it is investment advice — it is a structured starting point for your own research.