Tron Buys the Dip, But the Dip’s Still Doing Squats
In a power move that screams either genius or sheer audacity—Tron Inc. snatched 157,515 TRX on April 7 at $0.3174 a pop, because nothing fuels a crypto narrative like self-funding your comeback tour mid-market nosedive.
That little spree pushes their war chest to 690.3 million TRX, all part of the grand Tron DAO vision to “maximize shareholder value,” which sounds fancy until you remember the shareholders are mostly degens refreshing CoinGecko while eating cold pizza.
Meanwhile, TRX is out here playing emotional support coin to bears, dropping 0.98% that very day to $0.3151—just to add insult to injury, below their own buy-in price. Talk about awkward family dinners at the next treasury meeting.
The chart? Looks like a rejected horror movie script. Daily candles keep getting slapped back from $0.3235 like they’re trying to enter an exclusive club with a fake ID—this level’s been rejecting hopium since October 2025. And the trendline that once had their back? Broken faster than a DeFi promise during a rug pull.
With momentum in full retreat and ADX screaming 40.23—aka “pain is trending, welcome to the pain train”—a 13% drop to $0.2705 is on the menu, assuming price stays caged under $0.32 like a grounded teenager.
Bull case? Cute. It hinges entirely on breaking $0.3235. Which, given current energy, is about as likely as a peaceful crypto Twitter thread.
Funny enough, the 90-day Spot Taker CVD paints a rosy picture: March 31 to April 6 was one long green parade of buyers flexing their bags. But then the liquidation heatmap shows the truth—$0.31 and $0.3224 are now landmines packed with $1.14M in longs and $1.74M in shorts, just waiting for one clumsy trader to trip the wire.
So sure, Tron Inc. is buying. But the market’s out here grinning, handing them the dip while quietly whispering, “Hold my leveraged short, I’ll be right back.”
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