The NEAR market this time is quite frustrating. It was fierce when it was rising, but when it fell, it also caused a lot of trouble for people.
The price has crashed down from the highs, breaking through the lower Bollinger Band. Although there was a small rebound, it couldn't hold—support was breached instantly, and not even a decent bounce was formed.
What's even more distressing is this gradual decline. Although trading volume has shrunk, the selling pressure continues, which is the most frustrating part. With volume decreasing and prices falling, it indicates that there aren't many buyers stepping in, while sellers keep dumping.
From a technical indicator perspective, the MACD bearish signal has completely dominated. The DIF and DEA continue to trend downwards, and the green bars are gradually lengthening, making this signal unmistakable. In the short term, this kind of gradual decline may need to persist for a while; only with new positive news or a technical bottom appearing can the situation truly ease.
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SerumSquirter
· 2025-12-23 11:36
Here we go again, NEAR has really annoyed me this time. It screams when it rises and is dead silent when it falls.
It's the most frustrating when the volume shrinks and the price falls; who dares to buy the dip when no one is catching the falling knife?
Wait a minute, this MACD is really looking bad; I’m afraid it will continue to be turbulent in the short term.
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DataBartender
· 2025-12-23 11:32
Damn, NEAR is at it again, rising fiercely and falling even more fiercely, I'm so used to it.
Volume shrinking and price falling means no one is catching a falling knife, that's the most painful part.
The MACD green bars are getting longer, and I can't see a bottom in the short term, bro.
We have to wait for new news to get dumped or for it to really hit the bottom, right now it's just about enduring.
The NEAR market this time is quite frustrating. It was fierce when it was rising, but when it fell, it also caused a lot of trouble for people.
The price has crashed down from the highs, breaking through the lower Bollinger Band. Although there was a small rebound, it couldn't hold—support was breached instantly, and not even a decent bounce was formed.
What's even more distressing is this gradual decline. Although trading volume has shrunk, the selling pressure continues, which is the most frustrating part. With volume decreasing and prices falling, it indicates that there aren't many buyers stepping in, while sellers keep dumping.
From a technical indicator perspective, the MACD bearish signal has completely dominated. The DIF and DEA continue to trend downwards, and the green bars are gradually lengthening, making this signal unmistakable. In the short term, this kind of gradual decline may need to persist for a while; only with new positive news or a technical bottom appearing can the situation truly ease.