$HYPE is still in a weak bounce after shedding ~18% in a week, and price is now hovering around the $29–$30 area. Momentum is fragile and the market is treating this as a relief move, not a trend reversal yet.
As long as HYPE stays below $30.8, sellers keep control and the next magnet remains the $27 support. If we reclaim $30.8 and hold, the bounce can extend toward $33–$36 before the next decision point.
$WLD remains under heavy pressure, trading inside a clear descending channel on the daily timeframe. Every bounce so far has been corrective, with price failing to reclaim the upper boundary.
As long as WLD stays below the channel resistance, downside risk remains dominant. This move looks more like stabilization after distribution, not a trend shift yet. Structure needs to change before any bullish expectations make sense.
MARKET UPDATE: $XAU $XAU is responding exactly as expected after the DXY rejection highlighted earlier today. As the dollar weakened, gold regained momentum and reclaimed the key $5,000 zone, confirming the inverse relationship remains active.
As long as DXY stays under pressure, gold remains structurally supported. Pullbacks are corrective for now, not trend-breaking. We’ll stay alert for any shift in the dollar that could change this setup.
$DASH remains structurally weak, with price still trading below the dominant descending trendline. The recent bounce failed to reclaim prior support, reinforcing that sellers continue to control the structure.
As long as this trendline caps price, any upside should be treated as corrective. Downside risk remains present until a clear structural break occurs. We’ll keep you informed if conditions change.
CryptoQuant: Stablecoin inflows to exchanges are rising as $BTC corrects
CryptoQuant analysts note that as Bitcoin approaches a 50% correction from its October 2025 all-time high, there has been a noticeable increase in stablecoin inflows to crypto exchanges.
Stablecoin inflow trend (7-day moving average):
Late December 2025: fell to $51B, reflecting a lack of demand.
Now: rose to $98B, nearly doubling and slightly exceeding the 90-day average of $89B.
Analysts’ takeaway: The increase suggests faster capital deployment and renewed investor interest at current correction levels. Some participants are already starting to buy the dip.
However, selling pressure is still too strong to be fully absorbed by these inflows. For a sustainable trend reversal, capital inflows need to strengthen further.
$TAO remains trapped inside a descending channel. The recent bounce only brought price back to range equilibrium, with no reclaim of channel resistance.
As long as TAO stays below this structure, the bias remains bearish and risk is still skewed to the downside. This is consolidation, not strength.
MARKET UPDATE: $TON $TON is still trading inside a descending channel. The recent bounce came after a sharp sweep lower, but price is now stalling below channel resistance.
As long as TON fails to reclaim this upper trendline, the move remains corrective, not a reversal. Structure still favors lower highs.
MARKET UPDATE: $SOL $SOL lost its descending trendline support and accelerated lower. The recent bounce is reactionary after a sharp dump, not a structural recovery.
As long as price remains below this broken trend, risk stays to the downside. This is still distribution, not accumulation.
MARKET UPDATE: $DOGE $DOGE just lost a major support zone around $0.095, with price now down roughly -65% from the yearly highs.
Structure remains clearly bearish. The recent bounce looks like a reaction, not a reversal, and price is still trading below the long-term descending trendline.
As long as $0.095 fails to hold, downside pressure remains the dominant risk.
CryptoQuant: Stablecoin inflows to exchanges are rising as $BTC corrects
CryptoQuant analysts note that as Bitcoin approaches a 50% correction from its October 2025 all-time high, there has been a noticeable increase in stablecoin inflows to crypto exchanges.
Stablecoin inflow trend (7-day moving average):
Late December 2025: fell to $51B, reflecting a lack of demand.
Now: rose to $98B, nearly doubling and slightly exceeding the 90-day average of $89B.
Analysts’ takeaway: The increase suggests faster capital deployment and renewed investor interest at current correction levels. Some participants are already starting to buy the dip.
However, selling pressure is still too strong to be fully absorbed by these inflows. For a sustainable trend reversal, capital inflows need to strengthen further.
Altseason believers often pointed to this chart: there’s a trendline support here, and it “has to bounce” from it (the arrow on the chart) — so altseason soon 🧠
But now it feels like there’s a higher chance we get that other kind of “season” instead, especially given the apathy toward alts.
This is arguably one of the loudest capitulations in crypto during this sell-off, and a major source of $ETH selling in recent days.
There’s a Hong Kong investment firm called Trend Research, which became known for its massive leveraged long position on Aave worth $2.6B.
They built the long using borrowed funds at an average $ETH price of $3,267. When the price started dropping, Trend Research was forced to sell ETH throughout this week to service and repay the loans.
In the end, the company sold $1.8B worth of ETH at an average price of $2,326, locking in total losses of around $750M. They’re left with only $44M.
It’s sometimes hard to believe that firms with that kind of capital make such basic mistakes. No strict RM, excessive leverage, betting on a single scenario, and ignoring market volatility — all of that ultimately led to capitulation.
Let this be a reminder for you too: never overextend risk, don’t trade without a plan, and don’t assume “it can’t happen to me.” The market punishes everyone the same — regardless of deposit size.
MARKET UPDATE: $POL $POL closed the week below its long-term descending trendline, confirming continued structural weakness.
Price is down roughly -60% from the 2025 highs, and the recent bounce failed to reclaim any meaningful resistance. As long as price remains below the broken trendline, rallies look corrective, not trend-changing.