I’ve closely analyzed the Solana (SOL) chart using pure market structure, focusing on what has already happened and what is most likely to happen next. Based on this analysis, I see two possible scenarios, and both favor a bearish continuation.
Scenario 1: Pullback Before Further Decline
On the weekly timeframe, SOL broke a major structural low at $170.25, which marked a clear trend shift from bullish to bearish. After this shift: SOL created another lower low by breaking $125 This confirms a bearish structure (lower highs and lower lows) In this scenario, a pullback into the weekly supply zone at $178.33–$204.83 is expected.
Once price reaches this zone and forms a lower high, SOL may continue its bearish trend and break below $93, extending the downside move.
Scenario 2: Breakdown Before Pullback
In this case, SOL may: First break below the $93 low, creating a new lower low Then pull back into the weekly supply zone ($178.33–$204.83) Use that zone to form a lower high, confirming bearish continuation This scenario reflects strong bearish momentum, where price does not wait for a pullback before making another breakdown.
Conclusion Both scenarios indicate that SOL remains in a bearish market structure. Until price reclaims key highs and invalidates the current structure, downside risk remains dominant.
If this analysis helped clarify the situation for you, like the post and share your thoughts in the comments. $SOL #solana
$ALICE briefly broke below its all-time low at $0.10, but there was no candle close below that level — only a wick, which often signals rejection rather than a true breakdown.
$ALICE has a medium total supply and real utility, which gives it stronger fundamentals compared to many hype-based tokens.
I’m not claiming unrealistic targets like $10 or $20, but a move toward $0.50 is achievable if market conditions improve.
If you trade perpetual futures on Binance, you’ve probably noticed a “funding fee” every 8 hours. But why does it exist? Let’s break it down: $RIVER $CLO $DASH
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🔹 1️⃣ What Funding Is
Funding is a payment between traders, not Binance.
Longs pay shorts when the market is bullish
Shorts pay longs when the market is bearish
Binance just facilitates the transaction
Purpose: keep perpetual contract prices close to the actual spot price
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🔹 2️⃣ Why It Exists
Perpetual futures never expire, so prices can drift from the real market. Funding incentivizes traders to balance the market:
Price too high → longs pay shorts → some longs close → price drops
Price too low → shorts pay longs → some shorts close → price rises
Think of it as a market self-correcting mechanism.
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🔹 3️⃣ How It’s Calculated
Funding = Premium/Discount + Interest Rate
Paid every 8 hours
Only active positions pay/receive
Higher leverage = higher payment
Example:
BTC spot = $30,900
BTC perpetual = $31,000
Funding = +0.01% → Long 1 BTC pays $3.10 to shorts
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🔹 4️⃣ Key Takeaways
✅ Funding is not a Binance tax ✅ Keeps perpetual price near spot ✅ Can earn you money or eat your capital, depending on trend & leverage ✅ High leverage + holding long-term = funding costs can sneakily drain your balance
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🐸 Fun Ending
So remember: Funding is like the electricity bill for holding your futures — pay it on time, or your profits get fried! ⚡🔥