Simulate dollar-cost averaging into BNB
As of 2026-06-19, a recurring $100/week dollar-cost average into BNB (BNB) starting 2017-08-14 would total $46,200 invested and be worth $1,420,956 — a 2976% return. A risk-weighted DCA, which buys more when CycleBottom's risk metric is low and less when it is high, returned 1768% over the same period (1208 percentage points lower). DCA spreads purchases over time to reduce timing risk; risk-weighting tilts those purchases toward historically cheaper prices. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Informational only, not financial advice.
Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) invests a fixed amount on a fixed schedule regardless of price, spreading purchases across many different prices to reduce the risk of buying everything at a peak. This simulator replays your chosen contribution across BNB's full price history and reports total invested, final value, average cost, and return.
See the DCA guide and the risk-metric methodology for details.
Investing $100 into BNB every week since 2017-08-14 would total $46,200 invested and be worth about $1,420,956 as of 2026-06-19 — roughly a 2976% return with flat (equal-sized) buys.
Risk-weighted DCA scales each scheduled purchase by a multiplier (up to 5×) based on CycleBottom's 0–1 risk metric — buying more in low-risk (accumulation) zones and less in high-risk zones. For BNB, this approach returned 1768% versus 2976% for flat DCA over the same window.
Dollar-cost averaging spreads purchases over time so you buy at many different prices, which reduces the risk of buying everything at a peak. Historically, a steady $100/week DCA into BNB returned 2976%. This is educational only and not financial advice; past performance does not guarantee future results.
The simulator replays a chosen contribution (amount and frequency) across BNB's full price history, optionally multiplying each buy by a risk-based tier, then reports total invested, final value, average cost, and return for both flat and risk-weighted strategies.