Dogecoin Plunges 14%—But This Smells Like a Classic Bear Trap
Meme coin investors got a gut punch this week as DOGE nosedived double-digits. Yet seasoned traders recognize the hallmarks of a textbook bear trap—where panic selling precedes a vicious rebound.
The setup? Whale accumulation patterns during the dip suggest big players are loading up while retail flees. Meanwhile, the 200-day moving average holds as stubborn support—just like during March’s 30% fakeout.
Of course, Wall Street ‘experts’ will still call it reckless speculation. Funny how they never complain when DOGE outperforms their precious blue-chip stocks.
From bark to bite: DOGE shakes out the weak hands
DOGE’s sharp double-digit pullback comes down to a mix of macro headwinds and on-chain dynamics.
At the macro level, risk capital is playing musical chairs, flowing back into stocks and putting crypto in a “pause and digest” mode. Meanwhile, Bitcoin [BTC] is stuck in a tight range, keeping DOGE on a short leash.
As AMBCrypto notes, this is a classic choppy setup. But where there’s volatility, there’s opportunity, and traders seem to be playing right along.
On the 14th of May, DOGE’s new address count surged to 311,811, a six-month high, signaling renewed retail interest amid the shakeout.
Source: Glassnode
Additionally, Ali Martinez adds that DOGE’s structural demand remains rock solid, reinforcing AMBCrypto’s thesis: The memecoin still has plenty of bite despite the recent dip.
Market psychology matters here.
With conviction this strong, a retest of the $0.20 support looks off the table. Once macro FUD calms down, DOGE is primed to charge back toward $0.30, with FOMO ready to kick in and ignite a fresh rally.
Bears on thin ice
According to Coinglass, DOGE’s Open Interest (OI) ripped to $3.70 billion after reclaiming the $0.25 mark — levels last seen in early January.
But less than a week later, OI bled out $1.05 billion, pointing to a textbook deleveraging event, putting pressure on DOGE’s short-term supply.
Still, Binance’s DOGE/USDT order book reveals 75.8% long account dominance, signaling that bulls are reloading rather than retreating.
On the flip side, aggregated exchange data reflects 52.51% short dominance — a classic overcrowded bearish positioning.
Source: Coinglass
This skew mirrors broader market FUD. However, if sentiment snaps bullish, it sets up the perfect storm for a short squeeze — with DOGE primed to capitalize on a bear trap rebound.
Consequently, Dogecoin’s next MOVE could catch everyone off guard — turning recent shakeouts into serious shake-ups.
The current dip? Think of it as a golden entry point, with $0.30 firmly back on investors’ radar.
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