The number that matters: $468,000. That is the aggregate capital APEMARS ($APRZ) reports raising through Stage 20 of a 23-stage presale, against a current entry price of $0.000368960 and a stated listing price of $0.0055. Run the ratio and the implied return-on-listing is 1,390.67 percent, or roughly a 14.9x multiple if the listing price holds. Buyers who entered the opening stages are already sitting on a projected paper ROI of 2,071.63 percent, a 5.96 percentage-point premium per stage versus current Stage 20 entrants.
By the numbers
Token throughput tells a similar story. The project has placed more than 30.5 billion tokens with 1,757-plus wallets, which prices the median holder at roughly 17.4 million $APRZ and an average ticket near $266 once the raise is divided across the holder base. At the listing price of $0.0055, that average ticket would mark to about $95,700 a piece, assuming zero slippage, zero unlock dilution, and full listing absorption — three assumptions that historically fail in 70 to 90 percent of meme-token launches tracked by industry post-mortems.
An $8,000 hypothetical allocation at Stage 20 secures roughly 21.68 million tokens before the ROCKET250 bonus is applied. Marked to the $0.0055 reference, the position projects to $119,252, a $111,252 unrealized gain. That math assumes the listing clears at the marketing price and that secondary supply, including airdropped and bonus tranches, does not push the opening tape lower. Comparable 2025 presales tracked by on-chain dashboards opened, on average, 38 percent below their stated reference listing within the first 72 hours.
What the data says on the rest of the leaderboard
The broader nine-coin watchlist that surrounds the APEMARS narrative — Bitcoin Cash, Litecoin, Toncoin, Apeing, Stellar, Ethereum, World Liberty Financial and XRP — is where investors are rotating attention away from already-extended names. Bitcoin Cash continues to be positioned as a payment-utility play; XRP and Stellar remain the cross-border settlement pair traders pair against each other; ETH remains the liquidity anchor. The common thread across the basket is a measurable tilt toward names with sub-$10 unit prices, a cohort that historically delivers higher beta during late-cycle alt rotations.
The risk picture is just as quantifiable. Presale ROI projections are point estimates against a marketing-set listing price, not a market-cleared one. Burn checkpoints reduce nominal supply but do not retire bonus allocations earned via referral codes, which inflate the float at launch. A 1,390 percent paper ROI sits within a one-sigma band of historical presale outcomes — but so does a 60 to 80 percent drawdown inside the first trading week. The number to watch next is not the raise total. It is the opening 24-hour volume on the listing exchange.