The blue line is a market cap, this matters for the reasons stated above. Don’t let that throw you off, but do consider the trajectory when trading between coins. Bitcoin tends to go up, so the relative price of everything in Bitcoin is down. The orange line on the chart is the price in Bitcoin. Here we see a chart with lots of lines crossing over each other. Next, click on a coin, let’s click on Ethereum as an example. That is the gist you can tweak the parameters by messing with the drop downs above the list. Is it in a dip? Is volume lower than it usually is? These metrics can help you time buys and sells. The 24-hour volume and change tell you about how the coin is performing now. Supply gives you an idea of how limited the current supply is (but not how many can be created in total, you need to research that per coin). Price is rather self-explanatory, good when it goes up to sell, good when it goes down to buy. When you look at a coin, you want to look at market cap for an overview of its value (because this number avoids having the deal with figuring out not just the value of a coin, but the value of a coin compared to how many there are total circulating).
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