Hyperliquid’s HYPE token is retracing after hitting an all-time high near $75, with the asset currently down about 22% from that peak. The pullback is putting HYPE’s 2026 uptrend to its first serious test, as participation across derivatives has cooled while spot activity begins to show signs of stabilization following heavy selling in early June.
Traders are now focused on a defined support band between $50 and $54, described as the next major area where buyers must step in to preserve the broader higher-highs, higher-lows structure that has held since January.
HYPE slipped below $60 on Wednesday after failing to reclaim its all-time high area around $76. The selloff has carried the token toward the 50-day exponential moving average, which has served as a trend support level during much of the rally that began in March.
Technically, the current pullback is being compared to consolidation seen in May 2025, when HYPE printed a new high near $40 and then entered a multi-week pause. That prior pause cooled momentum without producing a clear bearish breakdown on the daily chart—an outcome traders may be hoping for again if current support holds.
Momentum indicators also look consistent with consolidation rather than an abrupt reversal. The relative strength index has rolled over from overbought conditions while staying above thresholds that typically accompany trend flips.
However, onchain and flow data remains mixed. According to aggregated spot cumulative volume delta (CVD)—a measure of net buying versus selling activity in spot markets—selling pressure has improved from recent lows during the correction. While that improvement has reduced the sell imbalance, spot CVD is still deeply negative at nearly $95 million. In practical terms, it suggests the market is losing steam on the selling side, but buyers have not yet demonstrated strong, persistent absorption at scale.
Support near current price levels is being noted, yet the size of demand is still modest relative to the selling recorded during the decline from $76 in early June, when total sell activity was referenced at about $110 million. Until the gap between those figures narrows, traders may interpret stabilization as “easing” rather than a confirmed accumulation phase.
The derivatives market has been showing clearer signs of cooling than the spot market. Open interest has dropped to roughly $1.73 billion from about $2.2 billion, indicating fewer outstanding leveraged positions.
At the same time, derivatives CVD has continued to trend downward and is now near negative $389 million, compared with approximately negative $400 million at the beginning of June. The combination of lower open interest and a declining derivatives CVD profile points toward traders trimming risk rather than opening new leveraged exposure.
That matters for how the next move may unfold. When leveraged participation declines, rallies and selloffs often become less explosive—meaning support tests can play out over a longer timeframe. For HYPE, this increases the importance of whether spot buyers can defend the next key levels without needing aggressive leverage to push price higher.
HYPE’s next major test sits between $50 and $54. This area is being flagged because it aligns with two technical elements: the rising 50-day EMA and an unfilled daily fair-value gap. Together, they form what appears to be the first meaningful support cluster below current trading levels.
Holding above this band would help preserve HYPE’s ongoing sequence of higher highs and higher lows, a structure that has remained intact since January. It would also keep the current pullback in line with earlier consolidations that formed within the broader uptrend, rather than turning it into a sustained breakdown.
Conversely, a loss of momentum could quickly change the tone. The article points out that a daily close below $53 would represent the first meaningful bearish shift on the daily chart this year. If that happens, the next support reference becomes the 100-day EMA around $51.6, followed by the lower edge of the fair-value gap near $49.
Beyond that, the next notable support area is cited around $38. The implication is straightforward: the market is not only watching a single “line in the sand,” but a ladder of levels that could determine whether the current correction is merely consolidating or transitioning into a deeper retracement.
One of the most important tensions currently highlighted is the divergence between improving spot flows and weakening participation in leveraged markets. That asymmetry can be a warning sign: stabilization in spot does not automatically translate to a durable recovery if derivatives traders continue to step back.
Crypto trader Altcoin Sherpa previously suggested a broad accumulation window, saying that “anywhere in the 55-64 area is a pretty good place to accumulate this one,” while also noting that the path could depend heavily on Bitcoin.
With HYPE now edging toward the $50–$54 region, the key question for the next stage is whether spot buying meaningfully outweighs remaining sell pressure inside the support band. If the token repeatedly defends that zone and derivatives participation stabilizes, it would strengthen the case that the correction is nearing exhaustion. If not—especially if price loses $53 on a daily close—attention will likely shift quickly to the next supports near $51.6 and around the fair-value gap boundary near $49.
This article was originally published as HYPE Slumps 22% From Records—Can Spot Demand Reignite Uptrend? on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.

