Quick Take
  • Cardano price rebounded sharply after breaking down from a falling channel and sliding nearly 20% to $0.22.
  • The quick 17% recovery toward $0.25 attracted fresh dip buyers.
  • However, with sentiment still weak and key technical risks unresolved, the rebound is now being closely tested.
  • Yet, there are reasons to believe that this ADA price bounce could be the start of something bigger.

What Happened

Strong Buying Shows Real Demand For ADA

Cardano’s rebound was possibly backed by strong spot demand.

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Market Context

Cardano price rebounded sharply after breaking down from a falling channel and sliding nearly 20% to $0.22. The quick 17% recovery toward $0.25 attracted fresh dip buyers.

However, with sentiment still weak and key technical risks unresolved, the rebound is now being closely tested. Yet, there are reasons to believe that this ADA price bounce could be the start of something bigger.

On the same day when the market crashed, spot netflows flipped sharply negative, reaching around $12.08 million, compared with $2.1 million the previous day.

However, this accumulation is occurring while market sentiment around Cardano remains unusually weak, and that’s the biggest risk at the moment.

Positive sentiment has fallen sharply since mid-January, dropping from around 57 to near 6, a 90% dip and a monthly low. Cardano’s strongest moves were often supported by rising optimism, as seen towards the end of January, when a local positive sentiment high coincided with a 9% price bounce.

Open interest has fallen significantly from its September peak near $1.95 billion and from around $841 million in mid-January to roughly $494.7 million. This represents a decline of more than 40% in less than a month.

At the same time, funding rates have turned slightly negative, showing that long positions are no longer aggressively dominant. This matters because many failed rebounds collapse when leverage rebuilds too quickly.

In Cardano’s case, the rebound is forming after a large liquidation and deleveraging event. With open interest compressed and funding neutral to negative, the risk of forced selling from overleveraged longs is currently low. This creates a healthier foundation for price stabilization compared with rebounds driven purely by derivatives speculation.

Large holders have also shown signs of confidence during the sell-off. The third reason why this ADA price bounce looks healthy.

Their balances remained stable between February 4 and February 6, even as price volatility spiked. This suggests that mid-sized whales viewed the crash as a buying opportunity rather than a signal to exit.

In previous market cycles, sustained recoveries were often preceded by this type of quiet accumulation during periods of fear. Still, sentiment data shows that broader market confidence has not yet followed whales higher.

While price rebounded, positive sentiment continued to decline, indicating that retail and media narratives remain cautious. This divergence means the rally is being led by positioning and capital flows, not yet by widespread optimism.

Key Cardano Price Levels Will Decide Whether the Recovery Holds

Why It Matters

After falling nearly 20% on February 5, after breaking the falling channel, ADA quickly rebounded, climbing back toward $0.25. The long lower wick seen on the last candle suggests buying pressure near the support.

Even so, sustained exchange outflows during a panic sell-off remain a constructive signal and form the first pillar of Cardano’s recovery attempt.

Derivatives Reset Has Reduced Leverage-Driven Risk

Whale Accumulation Signals Conviction During the Crash

Details

This shows that traders were actively withdrawing ADA from exchanges and accumulating during the crash, rather than preparing to sell.

This time, buying pressure and the corresponding bounce are aligning with eroding sentiment, meaning confidence is still weak.

The second major factor supporting Cardano’s rebound is the sharp reset in derivatives positioning.

Wallets holding between 10 million and 100 million ADA increased their combined holdings from around 13.41 billion to approximately 13.56 billion since early February, almost $40 million. More importantly, these addresses did not reduce exposure during the sharp drop toward $0.22.