Analyst Will Taylor highlights $0.078 as Dogecoin’s key support level, offering its best risk-reward setup since October 2023—driven by confluence of accumulation, volume, technical structure, and compressed RSI. A hold at this level could enable up to ~348% upside within the broader bull pennant range.
Bitcoin plunged to ~$69,500 amid extreme fear (Fear & Greed Index: 9), rising liquidations ($273M), falling open interest ($108B), and broad crypto losses; macro pressures include gold’s drop, stronger USD, and Middle East uncertainty.
Despite a 5% drop in Dogecoin's price, its ETF saw zero inflows, indicating lack of investor confidence amid the sell-off.
Dogecoin ETFs saw only two days of net inflows in March 2026—$779,100 on March 2 and $193,360 on March 13—totaling under $1M; daily traded value remains below $1M, and total net assets stand at $9.51M. After a strong January ($4.07M inflows), performance declined in February and remains below January’s peak.
Bitcoin whale transaction activity has plunged to multi-month lows, with $100,000+ transfers at their weakest since September 2023 and $1M+ transfers at a low not seen since October 2024 — signaling historic quietness amid regulatory and geopolitical uncertainty.
Dogecoin (DOGE) is consolidating near $0.0940 after failing to break above $0.0980, with bearish technical signals including a broken bullish trendline and weakening MACD/RSI. Key resistance lies at $0.0955 and $0.0980; major support is at $0.0940 and $0.0928. A break below $0.0880 could trigger further declines toward $0.0840 and $0.080.
This article examines the paradox of Dogecoin's bullish price action amid minimal ETF inflows—only 0.07% of total supply—and explores underlying factors driving waning institutional demand.