When I first looked at MIRA in 2026, what struck me was how quickly people framed it as either “cheap” or “dead.” The common misconception is that a token down 90 percent automatically becomes a bargain. My view is quieter. A good buy is not about how far price has fallen. It is about whether the structure underneath can support recovery.
On the surface, MIRA trades near $0.085 with a market cap around $17 million. That looks small in a market where Bitcoin ETFs absorb hundreds of millions in weekly inflows. Underneath, that small cap means thin liquidity. Thin liquidity enables sharp upside moves on modest capital. The risk is equally sharp downside when supply hits exchanges.
There are 1 billion tokens in total, with roughly 203 million circulating. That gap matters. It means future unlocks can expand supply. If releases are steady and predictable, markets can absorb them. If not, price pressure lingers.
MIRA’s AI verification narrative fits the broader AI trend. That enables speculative interest, especially as regulators focus more on trustworthy AI systems. The risk is adoption. Narrative demand is temporary. Usage demand is earned.
So is MIRA a good buy in 2026? It depends on coordination. Not hype, not hope, but whether supply discipline, real usage, and macro liquidity align. In small caps, survival comes before upside.#mira #Mira $MIRA @Mira - Trust Layer of AI