Polkadot’s DOT dropped 3% to $1,83, reversing earlier intraday gains as broader crypto markets weakened. Within 24 hours, the price fell rapidly from roughly $1,91 to $1,84 alongside a marked surge in volume that signaled distribution. As a result, the technical bias shifted to bearish into the close.
DOT’s decline unfolded amid a wider market pullback that pushed the CoinDesk 20 index down about 2%, reflecting synchronized selling across large-cap tokens. This backdrop framed the token’s intraday reversal and helped reinforce downside momentum.
DOT’s 24-hour trading volume jumped to 9,47 million tokens, roughly 340% above its 24-hour average, a spike that market observers interpreted as institutional distribution near the $1,95 level. Coinbase’s recent announcement of direct Polkadot network support did not arrest the decline, underscoring that positive listings or integration news can be insufficient against strong technical selling.
Within the same 24-hour window, the price moved from roughly $1,91 to $1,84 and printed a sequence of lower highs after peaking near $1,92, a pattern consistent with accelerating selling pressure. The combination of a decisive breach of the $1,90 floor and outsized volume served as confirmation that supplier dominance defined the reversal, with supply overwhelming demand.
Immediate support is identified at the $1,82 demand zone; that zone held intraday but remains vulnerable if institutional flows continue. Define: a demand zone is a price area where buying interest historically concentrates, often creating short-term support.
Market context and volume-driven distribution
The $1,90 level, previously a floor, has flipped into the first resistance band, with a secondary resistance near $1,95 — the distribution area. Analysts note that a sustained move back above $1,95 would be required to invalidate the current bearish structure and restore momentum. Conversely, failure to defend the $1,82 zone could expose DOT to further losses toward the $1,75–$1,80 area.
Operationally, the episode emphasizes the importance of volume-confirmed moves: the 340% volume spike acted as a confirmation of selling rather than a liquidity-driven washout. For traders, that implies tighter risk management while DOT trades below $1,95 and close monitoring of volume for signs of either continued distribution or re-accumulation.
DOT’s 3% drop to $1,83 shifted the near-term technical picture toward bearishness, anchored by a breach of $1,90 and an institutional-sized volume spike. The clearest immediate milestones are a sustained recovery above $1,95 to signal a trend reversal or a breakdown below $1,82 that would open risk toward $1,75–$1,80.
