The sideways movement of dog-themed tokens is like the calm before a storm; a single match can ignite the entire prairie!

News front:

Currently, Dogecoin seems to be waiting for the "starting gun" — this gun is most likely to be Musk's Twitter or a policy bomb. Recent three potential trigger points:

The Musk effect: If he suddenly mentions "Dogecoin payments for X platform fees", a price spike to 0.25 is not a dream; but if he hints at selling off, the floor price of 0.16 could be broken.

Conversely, if Bitcoin ETFs indirectly recognize meme coins, it could send the entire zoo sector soaring. Wall Street capital movements: Last week, Robinhood saw mysterious large buy orders (over 100 million), and if disclosed to be institutions like BlackRock entering, it would immediately trigger FOMO.

Technical analysis:

The Bollinger Bands coffin board is being nailed down tighter (0.17899-0.1924), quieter than cinemas during the pandemic, but history proves that such suffocating compression leads to either a violent surge or an avalanche.

The MACD performs the "lie of the golden cross": it seems that the bulls are dominant (DIF > DEA), but the bars are getting shorter day by day, resembling a slacker cramming before an exam. The current price of 0.19061 is stuck on the lifeline; upwards, 0.196 is a high-pressure area where shorts are laying traps, while downwards, 0.18 shows signs of support from the main force.

Practical strategy:

Short selling: Current price 0.19061 → 0.192 area, open short with a stop loss at 0.195, target 0.185 (earn pocket money from volatility).

Buying the dip: Place orders near 0.180, stop loss at 0.178 if it breaks, and sell quickly at 0.185 on a rebound.


Ready to hit the nuclear button, bullish signal: Breakout with volume above 0.2 and stabilize on two 4-hour lines, chase the long to 0.21. Crash warning: If it falls below 0.17899 and MACD shows a death cross, immediately reverse to short and aim for 0.16.

When everyone is focused on Musk's Twitter, regulatory hammers often strike from behind — do you think this time Twitter ignited the fire first, or did the SEC's knife strike faster? Click on my avatar and follow me, so you won’t be left hanging halfway up the mountain.