- DOGE was consolidating in a tight range with repeated bounces off a key support.
- Is the current compression phase the calm before a volatility breakout?
Dogecoin [DOGE] may be priming for its next directional move.
After spending the past week coiling between $0.14 and $0.17, price action is mimicking prior compression phases that have often preceded sharp breakouts.
Notably, DOGE rebounded at the start of the final week of Q2, bouncing off a key support zone last tested in early April. This level could serve as a springboard for a push toward $0.20 if bulls regain momentum.
But the setup remains fragile. Since topping out near $0.25 in early May, DOGE has seen three failed breakout attempts, each met with sharp long liquidations, signaling weak follow-through from buyers.
In fact, the most recent drop to $0.14 marked the fourth consecutive lower low within a 60-day window, reinforcing the bearish market structure.


Source: TradingView
On the derivatives side, Binance’s DOGE/USDT perpetuals are showing a 75% long dominance, underscoring strong trader conviction.
However, such heavily skewed positioning also amplifies the risk of a crowded trade. In turn, raising the likelihood of another long-side liquidity sweep.
Conversely, if resilient on-chain demand drives this leveraged positioning, then DOGE’s current consolidation likely signals strategic accumulation rather than market indecision.
In that case, bulls could set the stage for a classic bear trap that catches overextended shorts off guard.
DOGE’s leverage unwind hints at market stabilization
DOGE’s recent price action reveals more than just surface-level volatility.
As the chart below shows, the 32% drop from its early-May high of $0.25 wasn’t merely a technical pullback.
Instead, it marked a full-scale leverage flush. The long liquidation dominance spiked to 96.29% as overextended bulls were forced to unwind.


Source: Glassnode
What followed, however, signals a potential shift in market structure.
Liquidation dominance has since cooled sharply, dropping to just 6.14%, marking its lowest level this month, and hinting that the worst of the leverage bleed may be over.
Even more telling: When liquidation dominance spiked to 97.56% on the 21st of June, DOGE didn’t roll over like it did in May. That resilience could be a sign that the market’s structure is stabilizing beneath the surface.
In that context, the current long bias could represent post-flush strategic accumulation rather than reckless leverage.
In turn, setting the stage for a classic bear trap, with late shorts potentially fueling a squeeze toward the $0.20 mark.