The Solana price is showing signs of structural weakness after failing to sustain momentum above key resistance, raising concerns about a deeper correction.
After being rejected near $93, Solana slipped below the $90 support level, falling to a low of $88. At the time of writing, SOL is trading at $88.2, down 4.5%, reflecting increasing bearish pressure.
Breakdown Follows Failed Resistance Test
The recent rejection at $93 appears to have shifted short-term market control back to sellers.
Technical analysts are pointing to the formation of a bearish flag pattern, a continuation structure that historically signals further downside. In a previous instance, a similar setup led to a 56% decline, pushing SOL down to $67.
Some analysts now argue that if the pattern fully develops, a more aggressive scenario could drive prices toward the $40–$45 range, although this remains conditional on continued weakness.
Derivatives Market Signals Weakening Demand
The primary driver behind the decline is a sharp shift in derivatives positioning.
Data from CoinGlass shows futures outflows rising to $2.13 billion, while inflows dropped to $2.02 billion, resulting in a negative netflow of –$103 million, a 547% drop.
At the same time, open interest fell 2% to $5 billion, indicating traders are closing positions rather than adding exposure.
Liquidations further reinforced the bearish trend, with over $8 million wiped out, including $6 million in long positions.
Market Reaction Reflects Defensive Positioning
The broader market response has been cautious rather than chaotic.
Traders are reducing risk exposure, stepping back from leveraged positions, and in some cases exiting entirely. This behavior typically signals declining confidence and often precedes extended consolidation or further downside.
Technical Indicators Point to Trend Weakness
Momentum indicators are aligning with the bearish outlook.
The Future Grand Trend indicator suggests a potential move toward $75, with $57 identified as a worst-case scenario.
Meanwhile, the Average Directional Index (ADX) indicates weakening trend strength, with the Directional Movement Index (DMI) approaching a bearish crossover. Such a crossover would confirm increasing downside momentum.
ETF Inflows Offer Limited Support
Despite weakness in derivatives markets, spot demand is showing resilience.
Data from Sosovalue indicates that Solana spot ETFs recorded $4.5 million in net inflows in recent sessions, while avoiding consistent outflows.
Additionally, spot netflows dropped to –$35.5 million, the lowest level in nearly two months, suggesting accumulation activity as some investors buy into the dip.
Investor Psychology: Fear Meets Opportunism
The market is currently split between defensive traders and opportunistic buyers.
Short-term participants are reacting to technical breakdowns and liquidations, while longer-term investors appear to be accumulating at lower levels.
This divergence is creating a fragile equilibrium, where selling pressure persists but is partially offset by spot demand.
What Comes Next for Solana
Solana’s next move will likely depend on whether it can stabilize above the $85–$88 zone.
If selling pressure continues and key support levels break, the market could test lower levels toward $75, with extreme bearish scenarios pointing to $57.
However, sustained spot demand, particularly from ETFs, could help limit downside and support a potential recovery back toward $93.
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