Something pretty unusual happened recently—on-chain data shows that within two days, certain addresses accumulated about 480 million DOGE, which translates to over $70 million. Normally, such a massive buy order should have pushed the price up, right? But what actually happened was DOGE only briefly spiked to around 0.153 before it started dropping, and now it's just hovering there.
What does this mean? The market simply isn't keeping up. Retail investors aren't buying in, there's still heavy selling pressure, and a few whales throwing in money just isn't enough to shift overall sentiment.
From a technical perspective, things don't look optimistic either. The price has already dropped below several key moving averages, and short-term momentum is clearly lacking. On the upside, 0.152 is the first hurdle, with the real resistance at 0.155. On the downside, holding the 0.148 line is crucial—if that breaks, the next stop could be the 0.143 to 0.140 range.
My personal take is that this trend hasn't reversed yet—the price is more likely to keep testing lower support levels. Whether it can hold above 0.148 is pretty critical.
How to trade this? I don't recommend chasing at the current price. If you really want to enter, wait for the price to drop to the 0.143-0.140 area and then try scaling in with small positions—don't go all in at once. For those already holding, consider trimming some positions if there's a rebound to around 0.152. Whatever you do, remember to set stop-losses in advance and don't over-leverage your positions.
Bottom line, the whale buying is definitely something to keep an eye on, but it doesn't mean you should rush in right now. Wait for the market to really stabilize and for volume to pick up. Staying on the sidelines for now is actually the safer move.
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AirdropBuffet
· 13h ago
$70 million thrown in and this is all we get? Even whales can't do it.
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Retail investors are the real backbone; without them to take over, nothing works.
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I'll consider getting in when it drops to 0.14. Anyone chasing now is just a bagholder.
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If 0.148 breaks, I'm out immediately—don't be greedy.
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This is a classic case of whales hyping themselves up, the market isn't buying it at all.
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I just want to know if these whales are bottom fishing or trying to escape at the top.
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Reduce positions, sell on the rebound—don't wait for a miracle.
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Doge is pretty tough this round, but I feel like there's still another drop coming.
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If the trading volume doesn't pick up, it's all just empty talk. I'll wait and see.
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Whales throwing in money ≠ a bull market is coming. I stopped believing that logic long ago.
View OriginalReply0
HorizonHunter
· 12-07 18:52
A whale dumped 70 million and still couldn't move the market. This market is really sick; retail investors have already run away and there's no one left.
View OriginalReply0
GasGuru
· 12-06 06:20
70 million entered the market but still couldn't move the price, what does that mean... Retail investors are already scared.
View OriginalReply0
Aton09
· 12-06 03:20
Sharks dumped $70 million but still couldn't push the price up, what does this say? Retail investors are now smart, they don't fall for traps anymore.
Pay attention to the 0.148 mark; if it breaks, we'll keep digging lower.
Even whales throwing money can't move it; retail investors really have given up.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleShadow
· 12-05 14:47
Even throwing in 70 million can’t move it; retail investors are really staying away. Still need to wait for the volume to pick up.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeWhisperer
· 12-05 14:46
A whale dumped $70 million but still couldn’t move the market. What does this mean? Retail investors have gotten smarter and aren’t falling for it anymore.
Keep an eye on the 0.148 level—if it breaks, we’ll dig further down.
View OriginalReply0
BakedCatFanboy
· 12-05 14:45
Even throwing in $70 million couldn’t move it—now that’s truly heartbreaking.
Something pretty unusual happened recently—on-chain data shows that within two days, certain addresses accumulated about 480 million DOGE, which translates to over $70 million. Normally, such a massive buy order should have pushed the price up, right? But what actually happened was DOGE only briefly spiked to around 0.153 before it started dropping, and now it's just hovering there.
What does this mean? The market simply isn't keeping up. Retail investors aren't buying in, there's still heavy selling pressure, and a few whales throwing in money just isn't enough to shift overall sentiment.
From a technical perspective, things don't look optimistic either. The price has already dropped below several key moving averages, and short-term momentum is clearly lacking. On the upside, 0.152 is the first hurdle, with the real resistance at 0.155. On the downside, holding the 0.148 line is crucial—if that breaks, the next stop could be the 0.143 to 0.140 range.
My personal take is that this trend hasn't reversed yet—the price is more likely to keep testing lower support levels. Whether it can hold above 0.148 is pretty critical.
How to trade this? I don't recommend chasing at the current price. If you really want to enter, wait for the price to drop to the 0.143-0.140 area and then try scaling in with small positions—don't go all in at once. For those already holding, consider trimming some positions if there's a rebound to around 0.152. Whatever you do, remember to set stop-losses in advance and don't over-leverage your positions.
Bottom line, the whale buying is definitely something to keep an eye on, but it doesn't mean you should rush in right now. Wait for the market to really stabilize and for volume to pick up. Staying on the sidelines for now is actually the safer move.