What is Arch Aggressive Portfolio (AAGG)?
The Arch Aggressive Portfolio (AAGG) belongs to our family of portfolios and is aimed at capturing the long-term upside of Web3, while still providing diversification with yield-bearing tokens. AAGG portfolio is designed for long-term investors that prioritize potentially higher returns over risk or volatility. The portfolio focus is on maximizing returns through higher exposure to growth-oriented assets in the Web3 space. What sets our portfolio construction apart is our innovative methodology, which includes subset resampling.
How does Arch Aggressive Portfolio work?
This technique enhances the efficiency of the mean-variance optimization process, enabling us to identify the most efficient portfolios with the highest expected returns for a given level of risk. Our Arch Aggressive Portfolio is ideally rebalanced quarterly, allowing us to make adjustments based on market conditions or performance. The AAGG portfolio is available to swap, mint, and redeem on the Polygon network.
Where can you buy Arch Aggressive Portfolio?
Arch Aggressive Portfolio (AAGG) is traded on a wide range of centralized and decentralized exchanges. The most liquid markets for AAGG sit on tier-1 venues - the sort of exchanges where institutional desks and professional market makers rebalance continuously - which is what keeps the spread tight and the last price tied closely to fair value.
You can open the Markets section above to see the live list of exchanges quoting AAGG, sorted by 24-hour volume. Each row links to the venue's trade page so you can go directly from research to execution without copying the ticker around by hand.
What is the daily trading volume of Arch Aggressive Portfolio (AAGG)?
The reported 24-hour trading volume of Arch Aggressive Portfolio is $0.00. Volume is a live reading of how much AAGG changed hands across all tracked exchanges in the past day and tends to rise during periods of price discovery and fall during consolidation.
For traders, the ratio between volume and market cap is often more informative than either number on its own: a high vol-to-mcap ratio indicates liquid, actively traded supply, while a low ratio suggests that most holders are sitting on the asset.
What is the market cap of Arch Aggressive Portfolio (AAGG)?
Arch Aggressive Portfolio's market capitalization is currently $0.00, and it is ranked #9999 by market cap on Cryptopricing. Market cap is calculated as the current price multiplied by the circulating supply (0 AAGG are actively circulating today).
Market cap is a common but imperfect measure. It reflects the theoretical value of every circulating token at the current market price, but it doesn't capture how thin the top of the order book might be - an important caveat for tokens with low floats or illiquid cap tables.
How does the price performance of Arch Aggressive Portfolio compare against its peers?
Over the past 24 hours, Arch Aggressive Portfolio has moved -. Over the past seven days, the change is +0.00%. Comparing these figures to the global crypto market cap change (shown in the ticker at the top of this page) tells you whether AAGG is leading, lagging or tracking the broader market.
For deeper analysis, the categories strip on the home page groups coins by theme - Layer 1, Meme, DePIN, AI, RWA and so on - and lets you compare Arch Aggressive Portfolio against its closest peers. The category detail pages surface the underlying coins and their seven-day sparklines in a single view.
How to store Arch Aggressive Portfolio?
Like any crypto asset, the right way to store AAGG depends on how often you plan to use it. Long-term holders typically self-custody using a hardware wallet such as Ledger or Trezor, which keeps private keys offline and immune to most remote attacks.
For active traders, a reputable custodial exchange wallet can be appropriate, especially one with clear proof-of-reserves attestations. Whatever approach you choose, the most important rule is to keep your recovery phrase offline, never share it, and never enter it into a web form or attached to a DM - no legitimate support agent will ever ask for it.








