Bitcoin's strong rebound from $63,000 to $74,000 this week reaffirmed institutional investors' strategy of decisively buying the dip during market panic. In March, Bitcoin spot ETFs saw net inflows exceeding $700 million, Ethereum stabilized above $2,100, and major altcoins generally strengthened, pushing the total crypto market capitalization back to $2.46 trillion. While retail investors hesitated due to short-term volatility, forward-looking funds quietly positioned themselves and are now gradually reaping the rewards.
At 10:00 AM (PST) on March 5, 2026, BlockDAG (BDAG) was simultaneously listed on three major global exchanges: Coinstore, LBank, and BitMart, while also opening its official Direct Swap channel. Notably, users who participated in the pre-launch package subscription received their tokens at 8:00 AM that day, two hours before public trading. This built a solid and stable holding base for the opening, effectively avoiding early selling pressure.
BDAG opened at an initial price of $0.05 without any significant volatility. Prices remained consistent across multiple trading platforms, and substantial buy orders were steadily absorbed. In contrast to the rapid collapse often seen after the listing of most new coins, BDAG demonstrated strong resilience. Its market structure far exceeds that of typical projects, providing a clear signal to investors seeking potential projects based on real data rather than hype.
Professional market makers have set a short-term target price of $0.20 for BDAG. This prediction is not based on subjective speculation but on a combination of massive opening trading volume, high attention during the presale phase, and the unique liquidity restructuring effect during the transition from closed presale to the public market. From $0.05 to $0.20, this implies a potential gain of 300%. If the initial stage of growth is stable, subsequent targets will point to $0.40 and even $0.50, with a clear path and verifiable logic.
What truly drives the price upward is the scarcity mechanism. Despite the remarkable trading volume, the supply-side contraction is far exceeding general market expectations. Early package subscribers generally view $0.05 as the cost price rather than the selling price, with most waiting for $0.20 or higher before considering releasing their holdings. At the same time, staking activity is unusually active, with its locked-in scale already surpassing early Solana levels, further reducing circulating supply. Every hour, the number of available BDAG near the issue price continues to decrease.

When continuous capital inflows are offset by a rapidly shrinking circulating supply, price increases become inevitable. The current price difference between $0.05 and $0.20 is essentially a reflection of the market not yet fully digesting the supply crunch. Once the supply-demand relationship is widely recognized, the price will quickly reset, and investors who missed the early entry may face higher barriers.

