Dogecoin Below $0.10 With No Breakout; XRP Tests $1.30
XRP approaches a critical $1.30 support level that could redefine its short- to midterm trajectory, while Dogecoin consolidates below $0.10 without breakout momentum.
Key Takeaway
DOGE needs $0.10 to remove a zero, but technical structure shows no breakout momentum forming.
Dogecoin removing a zero this week is realistically a stretch given the current market structure, according to technical analysis from U.Today.
DOGE trades below the $0.10 mark with no breakout structure evident. The coin sits beneath its 50, 100, and 200 exponential moving averages, all of which continue declining. Reaching the $0.10 to $0.11 range required for zero removal would demand momentum that simply isn't there. The Relative Strength Index hovers around mid-range levels, indicating hesitancy rather than growth, while volume has steadily decreased. The network mints approximately 5 billion new DOGE annually through mining, creating constant sell pressure without offsetting returns from staking or DeFi mechanisms.
Dogecoin's downward trend is slowing, with consolidation replacing the sharp declines that defined recent months, even as the coin prints lower highs. Resistance sits at $0.13 to $0.14 near the 100 EMA.
XRP faces a more immediate crisis. The token trades dangerously close to its $1.30 support zone after printing lower highs for weeks. Both the 50 and 100 EMAs trend downward and sit above price, while a weak ascending trendline from recent lows is now breaking. Recovery attempts have been short-lived, with no bullish divergence or reversal buildup visible. If $1.30 fails, the $1.20 zone becomes the next critical test.
Shiba Inu trades in an increasingly tight range that resembles a weak ascending triangle. Price remains below all major moving averages, with the 200-day EMA acting as a distant ceiling. Candles are getting smaller and wicks tighter as volume gradually declines. The structure appears neutral at best given the dominant bearish context across months of trading. Compression phases build pressure, and the longer price stays confined within a narrow range, the more aggressive the eventual move tends to be, according to U.Today's analysis as of March 30, 2026.
This article was written based on reporting from U.Today.



