Source: CryptoTale
Original Title: DOGE Bearish Trend Holds Firm Despite Analysts’ Bullish Calls
Original Link:
Market Overview
Dogecoin’s slide has stretched into another week, and the tone across markets remains heavy. The token has been drifting lower since early September, rarely finding enough strength to stabilize, let alone reverse course.
By mid-morning, DOGE hovered near $0.1244. The move shaved another percentage point off the day and pushed weekly losses to roughly 11%. Its year-on-year performance tells a deeper story: a 64.67% decline that underlines just how persistent the trend has been.
Market depth continues to thin. DOGE’s market cap settles at $20.96 billion, yet trading activity looks weaker by the day. Volume slipped 42.9% in the last 24 hours to $832.53 million. That kind of contraction typically signals fatigue rather than preparation for a pivot.
ETF Launch Brings Little Change
While traders had hoped for a spark from the Dogecoin ETF launched on Nasdaq on Jan. 22 under the ticker TDOG, no momentum followed. Instead, the debut landed quietly. The long run-up of anticipation ended in a textbook “buy the rumor, sell the news” fade, leaving markets exactly where they were: uninspired and drifting.
The absence of inflows after the ETF’s arrival became the clearest message of the week. Traders watching for institutional participation saw none. Without fresh orders to support spot demand, the bearish slope steepened. Within hours of the first session, analysts began treating the listing as a neutral event rather than a catalyst.
Derivatives Data Shows Long Pressure
The derivatives tape adds another layer. Over the past day, liquidations reached $1.64 million, and most of that came from the long side, about $1.30 million versus $332.13K in short positions.
That imbalance suggests buyers were pushed out as prices slipped, reinforcing direction rather than challenging it. Open interest tells a similar story. It has eased to roughly $1.41 billion from this year’s peak of around $1.96 billion.
When OI falls this steadily, it often reflects participants stepping back, trimming exposure, and letting the market drift until conditions reset. None of that helps DOGE build a base.
Analysts Point to Long-Term Wedge Structure
Not every analyst sees this as a terminal slide. Ali Charts highlighted a long-running descending wedge tracked for years, patterns that, in past cycles, eventually resolved with sharp breaks to the upside. His chart places DOGE near the lower boundary of this structure, almost pressed against the floor around the $0.124 area.
He described prior wedge breakouts in 2017 and 2021 as precursors to strong rallies. The same setup now points to potential targets near $0.29, $0.55, and $1.10, though only if the price clears the upper line. At the moment, nothing confirms such a move.
Monthly Chart Shows a Rising Channel
Another analyst, Trader Tardigrade, turned to the monthly chart instead. His work shows DOGE holding a broad rising channel stretching across several years, with repeated pullbacks into support that later gave way to continuation moves.
The recent test of that support keeps the long-term structure intact. The trend of higher lows persists, even if day-to-day action suggests exhaustion. No formal target was attached, though the chart implies room for advance if the channel holds.
Conclusion
For now, DOGE remains shaped by the same forces that defined recent months: thinning interest, heavier long liquidations, and a lack of fresh capital. Until those conditions shift, the downtrend stays in control.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
9 Likes
Reward
9
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
EthSandwichHero
· 17h ago
Are analysts still calling for a buy? The decline in DOGE doesn't seem to be over yet.
View OriginalReply0
SandwichHunter
· 17h ago
Analysts' optimism is useless; Dogecoin just keeps falling, and the buying momentum is really weak.
View OriginalReply0
SerumSqueezer
· 17h ago
What are the analysts hyping up? The market itself is the true indicator...
View OriginalReply0
SchrodingerPrivateKey
· 18h ago
You're bearish again? I'm tired of this analyst logic. Is DOGE really that weak?
DOGE Bearish Trend Holds Firm Despite Analysts' Bullish Calls
Source: CryptoTale Original Title: DOGE Bearish Trend Holds Firm Despite Analysts’ Bullish Calls Original Link:
Market Overview
Dogecoin’s slide has stretched into another week, and the tone across markets remains heavy. The token has been drifting lower since early September, rarely finding enough strength to stabilize, let alone reverse course.
By mid-morning, DOGE hovered near $0.1244. The move shaved another percentage point off the day and pushed weekly losses to roughly 11%. Its year-on-year performance tells a deeper story: a 64.67% decline that underlines just how persistent the trend has been.
Market depth continues to thin. DOGE’s market cap settles at $20.96 billion, yet trading activity looks weaker by the day. Volume slipped 42.9% in the last 24 hours to $832.53 million. That kind of contraction typically signals fatigue rather than preparation for a pivot.
ETF Launch Brings Little Change
While traders had hoped for a spark from the Dogecoin ETF launched on Nasdaq on Jan. 22 under the ticker TDOG, no momentum followed. Instead, the debut landed quietly. The long run-up of anticipation ended in a textbook “buy the rumor, sell the news” fade, leaving markets exactly where they were: uninspired and drifting.
The absence of inflows after the ETF’s arrival became the clearest message of the week. Traders watching for institutional participation saw none. Without fresh orders to support spot demand, the bearish slope steepened. Within hours of the first session, analysts began treating the listing as a neutral event rather than a catalyst.
Derivatives Data Shows Long Pressure
The derivatives tape adds another layer. Over the past day, liquidations reached $1.64 million, and most of that came from the long side, about $1.30 million versus $332.13K in short positions.
That imbalance suggests buyers were pushed out as prices slipped, reinforcing direction rather than challenging it. Open interest tells a similar story. It has eased to roughly $1.41 billion from this year’s peak of around $1.96 billion.
When OI falls this steadily, it often reflects participants stepping back, trimming exposure, and letting the market drift until conditions reset. None of that helps DOGE build a base.
Analysts Point to Long-Term Wedge Structure
Not every analyst sees this as a terminal slide. Ali Charts highlighted a long-running descending wedge tracked for years, patterns that, in past cycles, eventually resolved with sharp breaks to the upside. His chart places DOGE near the lower boundary of this structure, almost pressed against the floor around the $0.124 area.
He described prior wedge breakouts in 2017 and 2021 as precursors to strong rallies. The same setup now points to potential targets near $0.29, $0.55, and $1.10, though only if the price clears the upper line. At the moment, nothing confirms such a move.
Monthly Chart Shows a Rising Channel
Another analyst, Trader Tardigrade, turned to the monthly chart instead. His work shows DOGE holding a broad rising channel stretching across several years, with repeated pullbacks into support that later gave way to continuation moves.
The recent test of that support keeps the long-term structure intact. The trend of higher lows persists, even if day-to-day action suggests exhaustion. No formal target was attached, though the chart implies room for advance if the channel holds.
Conclusion
For now, DOGE remains shaped by the same forces that defined recent months: thinning interest, heavier long liquidations, and a lack of fresh capital. Until those conditions shift, the downtrend stays in control.