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Looking at NEAR's recent decline, many people are panicking. The market cap has dropped sharply, and the entire coin is oscillating at low levels, moving sideways without much change, which is indeed frustrating. But what I want to say is that behind this seemingly hopeless trend, subtle signs of a bottom are already beginning to emerge.
First, from a technical perspective. NEAR's downward trend continues, with moving averages still showing a typical bearish alignment, and short-term rebound signals are not obvious. This is why so many people can't sit still. But there's a detail worth paying attention to—the trading volume over the past three days. I’ve noticed that during the decline, the trading volume has been steadily decreasing. What does this indicate? Panic selling is nearing its end. Fewer and fewer people are willing to cut their positions at this level, a typical sign of selling pressure exhaustion.
Next, look at the distribution of chips. Small concentrations of holdings are beginning to appear in the low-price range, which means some savvy funds are quietly positioning themselves here. Someone might ask, "Who would dare to buy after such a drop?" This is the core of contrarian trading—buying when others are panicking, but only if supported by clear signals, not by blind luck.
I haven't taken action yet; I'm just waiting for a confirmation signal. Either a volume-spike candlestick indicating a halt in the decline, or a successful breakout of the consolidation zone. Only then will the probability of a successful entry significantly increase. No rush, no impatience—it's all about whether the market gives this signal.