SOL currently exhibits typical signs of a strong end-phase in its technical setup, warranting caution.
From the 4-hour chart, although the price is within an upward channel, signs of fatigue are already evident—each successive high point has a diminishing upward move, with frequent upper shadows indicating accumulating selling pressure above. The moving averages remain in a bullish alignment, but this bullishness has become distorted: the price shows a clear divergence from the EMA, not a healthy advance, but rather a forced pull. More notably, the upper Bollinger Band has been touched multiple times, and the long-term proximity to the upper band makes a technical correction toward the middle band highly likely.
The 1-hour timeframe is the real battleground. In the 135-138 range, SOL repeatedly pushes higher but consistently fails to establish a firm foothold. Each rally is accompanied by the same issue: volume does not follow, a classic warning sign of "price moving but money not following." Short-term EMAs are beginning to flatten, indicating that short-term funds are quietly withdrawing. This is not a breakout rally but a common high-level trap setup.
From the main force perspective, current actions seem more like preparing for distribution rather than continuing to push higher. The short-term strategy should be: avoid chasing the high, only short on rebounds, and profit from pullbacks.
Key operational figures: Open positions around 136, with two target levels—first at 134, second at 133. Stop-loss set above 138. The core logic is to seize the turning point between fatigue at high levels and technical correction.
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DataOnlooker
· 7h ago
Price movement doesn't match the volume, this is outrageous.
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QuorumVoter
· 01-06 19:22
Price and volume are disconnected, which is a prelude to a pump. I was tricked by this tactic last time.
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StakoorNeverSleeps
· 01-06 12:57
The price is moving, but the momentum isn't following. This wave is indeed weak.
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CexIsBad
· 01-05 03:55
Hey really, the 135-138 range looks a bit like a trap. Can it hold until 138?
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SurvivorshipBias
· 01-05 03:53
The smell of manipulation is too strong, 136 was left empty, this wave definitely deserved to eat back the retracement meat.
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alpha_leaker
· 01-05 03:47
Hmm... You really need to be careful about the disconnect between price and volume. I've been caught in that trap before in previous years.
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RektDetective
· 01-05 03:39
When the price can't keep up with the trading volume, it's time to run. This analysis has some substance; opening a short at 136 still takes some guts.
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WenMoon
· 01-05 03:33
Price can't keep up with trading volume, and this old trick of诱多 is back again.
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GateUser-6bc33122
· 01-05 03:30
The pump-and-dump scheme is too familiar; 135-138 is just a trap, waiting to cut the leeks.
SOL currently exhibits typical signs of a strong end-phase in its technical setup, warranting caution.
From the 4-hour chart, although the price is within an upward channel, signs of fatigue are already evident—each successive high point has a diminishing upward move, with frequent upper shadows indicating accumulating selling pressure above. The moving averages remain in a bullish alignment, but this bullishness has become distorted: the price shows a clear divergence from the EMA, not a healthy advance, but rather a forced pull. More notably, the upper Bollinger Band has been touched multiple times, and the long-term proximity to the upper band makes a technical correction toward the middle band highly likely.
The 1-hour timeframe is the real battleground. In the 135-138 range, SOL repeatedly pushes higher but consistently fails to establish a firm foothold. Each rally is accompanied by the same issue: volume does not follow, a classic warning sign of "price moving but money not following." Short-term EMAs are beginning to flatten, indicating that short-term funds are quietly withdrawing. This is not a breakout rally but a common high-level trap setup.
From the main force perspective, current actions seem more like preparing for distribution rather than continuing to push higher. The short-term strategy should be: avoid chasing the high, only short on rebounds, and profit from pullbacks.
Key operational figures:
Open positions around 136, with two target levels—first at 134, second at 133. Stop-loss set above 138. The core logic is to seize the turning point between fatigue at high levels and technical correction.