DOCK
DOCK is not dead quiet. It is in that low-noise phase where nothing looks urgent on the surface, but something still feels unresolved underneath.
If you map out expectations for 2026 to 2027, the range is unusually wide. One side still sees a recovery path, with room to move back toward $0.08 to $0.12 if attention rotates back in. The other side is already leaning toward near irrelevance, down around $0.001, as if the market has quietly decided to move on.
That kind of gap is not random. It says something.
When an asset carries two completely different futures at the same time, it usually means it has not been priced properly yet. There is no real consensus. No stable narrative. Just uncertainty. And that is often where repricing starts, not where it ends.
Stretch the view out to 2028 through 2030, and the tone starts to shift again. Longer-term expectations look more constructive, with some targets moving toward $0.18 and above. But that optimism is not built on hype. It depends on something much simpler. Persistence. If DOCK keeps building without attention, that quiet stretch can create asymmetry later.
Still, none of these outcomes exist on their own. Markets do not move because projections look good on paper. They move on liquidity, narrative, and timing. Without those, even the most reasonable outlook stays theoretical.
Right now, DOCK is not commanding attention. It is not part of the main conversation. It is not attracting momentum.
It is just sitting in that in-between state.
And historically, that is often where the earliest stage of the next move begins, long before it becomes obvious.