Crypto World
The Solana Pattern Traders Love Is Actually a 50% Crash Setup
Solana price has held a rising channel for more than three months, yet the structure may be hiding the same continuation pattern that powered a collapse of over 50% from mid-January to early February.
The token sits roughly 3% above the channel’s lower trendline. On-chain data shows hodler conviction slipping and short-term holder cushion thinning. The setup is one bad day from breaking.
Solana’s Rising Channel Looks Bullish, But the Pattern Hides a Continuation Risk
Solana (SOL) has traded inside a parallel ascending channel since February 6, with the channel base anchored at the bottom of a 50%+ collapse that played out across roughly three weeks from mid-January to early February.
Want more token insights like this? Sign up for Editor Harsh Notariya’s Daily Crypto Newsletter here.
The usually bullish channel itself looks constructive on the surface. SOL has put in higher lows along the lower trendline and tested the upper trendline once.
Yet, the pattern nuance matters. A rising channel that forms immediately after a major drop is often a continuation pattern in disguise rather than a true reversal. Until SOL closes above the upper trendline, the broader bearish trend remains the higher-probability resolution.
Volume signals add weight to the warning. Buying volume has fallen steadily since early February, even as price has rallied inside the channel. That divergence shows fewer dollars supporting each fresh high at above $97. SOL is now drifting back toward the lower trendline on the same thin volume base.
The on-chain record explains why this matters now.
Hodler Accumulation Just Slipped 13%
Glassnode’s Solana Hodler Net Position Change, a metric that tracks the daily change in coin supply held by wallets that have held SOL for more than 155 days, has stayed in positive territory since early March 2026. Hodlers have been net buyers across the entire early-May rally.
The signal turned softer this week. On May 25, the daily net position change peaked near 3.2 million SOL, marking one of the strongest accumulation days of the cycle. By May 26, the figure dropped to roughly 2.78 million SOL, a 13% pullback in 24 hours.
Hodlers are still accumulating, just at a noticeably slower pace. That deceleration coincides directly with SOL’s slide back toward the channel’s lower trendline. The conviction cohort that has absorbed sell pressure across the past three months is taking the foot off the gas exactly when the chart needs them most.
The question is whether the more speculative cohort still has reasons to hold.
Short-Term Holder NUPL Sits Near Six-Month High
Solana’s Short-Term Holder Net Unrealized Profit/Loss (NUPL), a Glassnode indicator that measures whether holders of SOL coins under 155 days old are sitting on profits or losses, currently reads -0.157. The reading sits well above the deep capitulation zone visible during the February crash.
The current value also remains close to its six-month high of -0.03, printed on May 11.
This is paradoxically bearish. Short-term holders typically keep coins for two reasons. The first is high upside conviction. The second is low downside risk. Neither condition is fully met right now. The price chart is approaching a breakdown level, hodler accumulation has slowed, and unrealized losses for short-term holders are still minimal compared to historical capitulation.
A cohort sitting on small losses with weak conviction tends to sell early rather than ride out a deeper drawdown. The setup leaves a structurally large pool of supply that could exit if the trendline breaks.
The price chart now sets the trigger.
Solana Price Levels Between a 3% Break and a Channel Reclaim
Solana price trades at $83.78, sitting roughly 3% above the channel’s lower trendline near $81.24, which aligns with the 0.786 Fibonacci level of the channel’s recent April-May advance.
A daily close below $81.24 confirms the channel breakdown. The first downside level post channel breakdown is $76.61 (1.0 Fibonacci).If the breakdown extends, $63.21 (1.618 Fibonacci) becomes the next checkpoint. A full mirror of the late-January continuation move would expose $41.53 (2.618 Fibonacci), roughly 50% below current price.
The bullish reset begins with sequential reclaims. Reclaiming $84.89 (0.618 Fibonacci) stalls the immediate bearish momentum. A daily close above $87.45 (0.5 Fibonacci) is the more critical step, since that level has capped every upside attempt since May 20. Above $87.45, the path opens toward $93.17 (0.236 Fibonacci).
A clean break above $98.29 would weaken the continuation pattern entirely. For now, a daily close below $81.24 separates a routine pullback inside the channel from a confirmed continuation of January’s 54% drop.
The post The Solana Pattern Traders Love Is Actually a 50% Crash Setup appeared first on BeInCrypto.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login