Is Kalata (KALA) Dead?

Kalata is ALIVE. ZARQ Vitality Score: 50.3/100 (C). Crash probability: N/A%. Rating: NR. Last analyzed May 2026.

ALIVE

Moderate ecosystem health. Stable but not exceptional.

50.3
Vitality
NR
Rating
N/A%
Crash Risk
WARNING
Alert

Vitality Analysis

Kalata has a vitality score of 50.3/100, grade C. Activity metrics show moderate levels. The project is functional but growth has stalled.

Risk Metrics

MetricValueSignal
Distance-to-Default (NDD)N/AN/A
Crash Probability (30d)N/A%N/A
Structural Weakness1Present
Risk LevelWARNING
Alert LevelWARNING
Price (USD)$0.002075

What Does "Dead" Mean for Crypto?

A cryptocurrency is considered "dead" when it shows no meaningful development activity, trading volume has collapsed, the community has disbanded, and the project shows no signs of recovery. ZARQ's Vitality Score measures this across multiple dimensions: on-chain activity, developer commits, social engagement, exchange listings, and liquidity depth.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Kalata dead?
Kalata has a ZARQ Vitality Score of 50.3/100 (C). Verdict: alive. Moderate ecosystem health. Stable but not exceptional.
Will Kalata recover?
Crash probability: N/A%. Alert level: WARNING. Recovery signals are present based on ecosystem activity.
Should I sell Kalata?
This is not investment advice. Kalata has a NR rating with N/A% crash risk. The vitality score suggests continued viability.
Is Kalata a good investment in 2026?
ZARQ rates Kalata at NR with a vitality score of 50.3/100. Crash probability: N/A%. Always do your own research.
What is Kalata's ZARQ rating?
Kalata has a ZARQ Trust Rating of NR. This is based on five pillars: market structure, liquidity, on-chain health, ecosystem activity, and governance.

API Access

Check any token programmatically:

curl -s zarq.ai/v1/crypto/check/kalata | jq .
All Tokens Crash Watch Vitality Yield Risk Contagion Methodology Track Record Scan Portfolio Full Analysis Dead? Scam? Crash?

ZARQ ratings are quantitative risk assessments based on public blockchain data, not investment advice. Past performance does not predict future results. Always do your own research.