Solana tests $85 support as futures open interest shifts

Solana tests $85 support as futures open interest shifts

Yes, $85 is key Solana support; a breakdown weakens the base

This Solana price analysis centers on whether $85 can continue to act as an effective floor. Market structure has been carving lower highs, so repeated tests of this shelf increase the probability that a decisive breach would weaken the base and shift the near-term bias to further price discovery lower.

In practice, the integrity of this support depends on acceptance. Brief dips that are immediately reclaimed differ from time-based acceptance below $85; the latter would imply supply is overwhelming bids and that the prior consolidation failed to hold.

Technical signals: RSI, EMAs, funding rates, futures open interest

As reported by FXStreet, the backdrop into this retest featured negative funding rates, a declining RSI, and downward-sloping exponential moving averages (EMAs), alongside softer institutional demand and fading retail interest. These conditions typically mean bounces struggle to sustain because rallies meet supply at the EMAs while derivatives positioning is cautious.

Derivatives positioning offers a second check on momentum because Solana futures open interest tracks how much risk traders are willing to keep on. After a sharp de-risking, one widely cited dataset shows the speculative base has thinned materially. “SOL futures open interest dropped about 75%,” said Marcel Pechman, markets analyst at Cointelegraph.

At the time of this writing, spot price is hovering in the mid-$85s with momentum gauges near neutral, a roughly 50-print on RSI, and spot trading beneath both the 50- and 200-day trend proxies. Screening dashboards also show medium volatility and a short-term bearish tilt in sentiment, underscoring that any rebound must prove itself above fast-moving averages to change the tape.

On-chain usage, TVL trends, and next key support levels

As reported by CoinPedia, network usage has cooled, with Total Value Locked and transactional activity easing; that deterioration in on-chain demand can make supports less durable. The report also notes that failure to stabilize near $85 would put the $80 area at risk, consistent with a market that is respecting lower highs and reluctant dip-buying.

For deeper drawdown scenarios, BlockNews highlighted that the breakdown from the prior $128–$150 consolidation came with heavy volumes and flagged a $65–$75 region as a potential secondary accumulation zone if weakness accelerates. Near term, a constructive stabilization would involve holding above $85 and then repairing structure by reclaiming successive resistance layers; absent that, traders often look to previously active zones to gauge where bids may re-emerge.

Disclaimer:

The content on The CCPress is provided for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry inherent risks. Please consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
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