Mathematical Scarcity and Caused Liquidity: The Secret of Low Supply Gems 🧠🐋📊 :
In the crypto market, the institutional "edge" is not always in predicting news:
It is in understanding microstructure. When an asset has an ultra low Max Supply (≈ 2.6M to 21M), a quantifiable phenomenon appears: Mathematical Scarcity. In these ranges, a relatively "normal" capital entry for a desk (or for whales 🐋) can generate disproportionate movements because the real depth of the order book near the price is limited.
I call this Caused Liquidity: it’s not that there is "no market," but that the visible supply runs out quickly when aggression arrives. What does it provoke?
✅ sweeps of levels,
✅ slippage and expansive candles,
✅ “anomaly” type movements that seem impossible… until you look at the flow.
The quant trigger: Taker Ratio (TKR) > 1.12 to 1.45 ⚡
The TKR (Taker Buy/Sell Ratio) measures whether the volume is dominated by market buys versus market sells.
In low supply, the TKR threshold > 1.25 to 1.45 is a “golden trigger”: it usually confirms that buyers are not waiting (they hit the offer) and that the price is sweeping liquidity instead of just “rising by inertia.”
Examples where this dynamic is felt 🔥
Assets like TRB (very low supply), TAO, ORDI, and QNT can react strongly when aggression enters: less effective supply + fewer layers of offers = greater convexity of the movement.
Question for the community: what do you prefer to trade these gems, confirm with TKR or wait for structure/RSI? 👇🧩
#BinanceSquare #Orderflow #BinanceKOLIntroductionProgram #LUIS77 #Tokenomics 🚀
$BTC