$RIVER – Running into resistance again after the push, momentum starting to fade
Trading Plan Short $RIVER Entry: 26.2– 27.6 SL: 29.5 TP: 24.2 TP: 22.6 TP: 21.0
The move higher managed to extend but the advance is beginning to slow down around this zone. Buyers tried to keep the rally going, though the follow-through is fading and the structure is turning more choppy. Instead of continuation higher, price is starting to grind into resistance, and when momentum cools off like this it often leads to a pullback as sellers step back in.
$POWER – Pullback stabilizing while buyers begin stepping back in around this area
Trading Plan Long $POWER Entry: 0.105– 0.112 SL: 0.098 TP: 0.118 TP: 0.128 TP: 0.140
The recent dip looks controlled rather than aggressive, with selling pressure fading instead of expanding. Price is starting to stabilize after the pullback, suggesting buyers are still active around this zone. When structure holds like this after a push higher, it often sets up for continuation as momentum begins to rebuild.
$VVV accumulating near support, ready to break out following trend.
Plan trade: Long Entry zone: 5.78 - 6.03 Take profit: TP1: 6.20 TP2: 6.36 TP3: 6.65 Stop loss: 5.60
$VVV Price has broken the short-term downtrend on H1 and m15. Maintaining higher lows structure combined with increasing buying pressure at 5.8 suggests a strong continuation of the upward momentum.
The sell-off lost follow-through and buyers stepped in quickly, showing signs of absorption rather than panic selling. Price is holding its base and downside momentum isn’t expanding. As long as this level holds, a push higher is the more likely path.
The selloff exhausted quickly and price found support with a sharp reaction, hinting at absorption rather than continued distribution. Sellers failed to push lower after the flush, and buyers are starting to stabilize price. As long as this base holds, a push higher is the cleaner play.
Sign : When Trust Starts Moving Across Systems Instead of Staying Stuck
I have been thinking about how trust works online.Not the idea of trust, but how it actually moves. Or maybe more accurately, how it doesn’t.Most of the time, trust feels stuck inside individual platforms. You build some form of credibility in one place, but it doesn’t really carry anywhere else. You start over again somewhere new, repeating the same steps.It works, but it feels inefficient.You can usually tell when something is missing in the background. Everything functions, but nothing connects properly.That’s what made SIGN stand out to me.The idea seems to focus on letting trust move. Credentials don’t stay locked inside one platform. They can be verified once and then reused across different environments without restarting the process every time.At first, I thought of it as a convenience.But after sitting with it for a while, it starts to feel more structural than that.Because once trust can move, systems begin to feel connected. Interactions become smoother. You’re not constantly rebuilding the same proof from scratch.That’s where things get interesting.It’s not just about efficiency. It changes how ecosystems grow.While thinking about this, I kept coming back to the Middle East. There’s a clear push toward building independent digital economies there, but trust layers still feel fragmented between platforms and institutions.If SIGN becomes widely adopted, it could quietly act as digital sovereign infrastructure supporting that growth. A shared layer where trust isn’t isolated, but allowed to move across systems.I’m still watching how this develops.But it already feels like a step toward something more connected, where trust doesn’t stay stuck in one place anymore.#SignDigitalSovereignInfra $SIGN @SignOfficial
What does 100,000 TPS look like? Sign’s CBDC reference has the answer.
@SignOfficial private CBDC reference architecture is one of the more technically specific sovereign infrastructure specs available publicly - and the performance targets are worth examining carefully. The private rail runs on a Hyperledger Fabric-based stack using Arma BFT consensus, targeting 100,000+ TPS with immediate finality upon commitment. Not eventual finality. Immediate. For a retail CBDC serving millions of concurrent users across a national payment system, that distinction has direct operational consequences.
The architecture supports UTXO-based token operations, peer-to-peer transaction negotiation via Fabric Smart Client, and X.509 identity certificates managed through a central bank-controlled MSP. ISO 20022 compatibility is built in from the start. Privacy runs in two namespaced tiers: wCBDC for wholesale RTGS-style transparency, rCBDC for high-privacy retail flows with configurable ZK privacy.
What stands out is the framing. @Sign’s spec reads less like a crypto whitepaper and more like a central bank procurement document. That is not accidental - it reflects exactly who S.I.G.N. is designed for. $SIGN #SignDigitalSovereignInfra
The push higher stalled quickly and got sold into on first contact, which leans more corrective than impulsive. Momentum is fading again, and price isn’t finding acceptance above this zone, keeping downside continuation as the higher probability.
The push higher stalled quickly and sellers showed up right away, pointing to a corrective bounce rather than a real reversal. Momentum is fading again, and price isn’t getting acceptance above this zone—keeping downside continuation in play.
The push higher stalled almost immediately and supply showed up on first contact, pointing to a weak move rather than a real shift. Momentum is fading and price isn’t accepting above this zone, so downside continuation remains the cleaner play.
$APR Strong correction to support zone, time to Long.
Plan trade: Long Entry zone: 0.123 - 0.129 Take profit: TP1: 0.132 TP2: 0.137 TP3: 0.145 Stop loss: 0.119
$APR Price hit D1 support after a sharp sell-off. H1/H4 RSI recovering from oversold, forming a local bottom. Expecting a technical bounce toward key EMA levels.
$ASTER recovery signs after a sharp correction phase.
Plan trade: Long Entry zone: 0.675 - 0.695 Take profit: TP1: 0.715 TP2: 0.740 TP3: 0.765 Stop loss: 0.655
$ASTER Price completed its correction and started forming a short-term bottom on H1. Buying pressure returned at key support, confirming a positive reversal and recovery signal.
$ADA – Running into resistance after the bounce, looks like a good spot to lean short
Trading Plan Short $ADA Entry: 0.258 – 0.268 SL: 0.281 TP: 0.245 TP: 0.230 TP: 0.215
The bounce pushed price higher but the move is starting to lose strength around this zone. Buyers tried to extend the rally, though the follow-through is fading and the structure is becoming more choppy. Instead of continuation higher, price is beginning to grind into resistance, and when momentum cools off like this it often leads to a pullback as sellers step back in.
$ANIME maintaining bullish structure, accumulating well above support.
Plan trade: Long Entry zone: 0.00513 - 0.00533 Take profit: TP1: 0.00549 TP2: 0.00565 TP3: 0.00595 Stop loss: 0.00495
$ANIME Price is compressing and holding firmly above key EMAs. The H1 chart shows steady demand at the support zone, signaling readiness for the next breakout.
Trade Plan: Long Entry zone: 0.00512 - 0.00537 Take profit: TP1: 0.00555 TP2: 0.00575 TP3: 0.00595 Stop loss: 0.0494
$RDNT Price surged from the 0.0039 bottom with high volume. On H1 and H4 charts, EMA lines are crossing upward and RSI remains bullish, confirming a strong short-term recovery trend.