- Litecoin is trading around $105–$106, with on-chain data showing a big jump in trading volume, rising liquidity, and futures positioning shifting bullish as longs start to dominate shorts.
- LTC recently broke above key resistance at $96.30 and the 50-day EMA near $101.45, with RSI around 56 and a fresh MACD bullish crossover hinting that upside momentum is slowly kicking in.
- As long as the 50-day EMA holds as support, Litecoin could extend its rally toward the October high near $135.99, while a close back below $101.45 risks a pullback toward the $96.30 support zone.
Litecoin is starting to look lively again. After drifting for a while, LTC is now trading near the $105 region on Tuesday, riding a fresh wave of bullish momentum that’s moving across the broader market. What’s interesting this time is that it’s not just price action doing the talking. On-chain and derivatives data are both flashing signs of growing confidence: higher trading volumes, positive funding rates, and clear signs of accumulation from larger players. Put together, the technical outlook is leaning toward further upside, as momentum indicators slowly kick into gear.
On-chain and derivatives data hint at more upside
Fresh data from Santiment shows that trading volume across the Litecoin ecosystem has picked up sharply. On Sunday, the aggregate trading volume generated by exchange applications on the chain hit around $2.03 billion, which is the highest level seen since mid-October. By Tuesday, it was still sitting at roughly $1.46 billion, which is far from quiet. That spike in volume usually means traders are paying attention again, and liquidity is flowing back in, both of which tend to support a more bullish scenario.
On the derivatives side, CoinGlass’ OI-Weighted Funding Rate is also tilting in favor of the bulls. The metric has flipped into positive territory and currently stands around 0.0055%. In simple terms, that means long traders are paying shorts, which is typically a sign that more people are betting on higher prices than on a continued drop. It doesn’t guarantee anything, of course, but it definitely leans toward optimistic positioning rather than fear.
CryptoQuant futures data adds another layer to the story, showing large whale orders and buy-side dominance in Litecoin’s futures market. When bigger players start loading up or shifting their bias to the long side, it often signals that they’re positioning ahead of what they expect to be a stronger move. Put all of that together and you get a picture of a market that’s quietly rotating back in favor of LTC, even if the charts don’t look euphoric just yet.

Momentum indicators suggest the trend is turning
From a price action perspective, Litecoin had a pretty solid week. LTC rallied more than 10% last week, breaking through a key resistance zone around $96.30 and then pushing above the 50-day EMA, which was sitting near $101.45. That’s an important technical level, and closing above it signals a shift from short-term weakness back toward a more constructive trend.
As of Tuesday, Litecoin is hovering around $105.90, using that same 50-day EMA as a support area rather than resistance. If this moving average continues to hold and buyers keep defending that zone, the rally has room to stretch further. The next big technical target on the upside is the October 6 high at $135.99, which would be a meaningful move from current levels and a strong confirmation that bulls are properly back in control.
The indicators backing this move are starting to line up as well. On the daily chart, the Relative Strength Index sits around 56, which is above the neutral 50 mark and points to bullish momentum gaining traction. It’s not overbought, not overheated, just in that healthier middle area where trends can keep extending without immediately burning out. At the same time, the MACD printed a bullish crossover last week and remains in that configuration, suggesting that the upward trend still has room to continue if buyers don’t lose interest.
Of course, it’s not all one-way traffic. If Litecoin stumbles and closes back below the 50-day EMA at $101.45, that would weaken the short-term bullish case and could invite a deeper pullback. In that scenario, downside extension toward the weekly support around $96.30 becomes more likely, basically retesting the level it just broke above. For now though, as long as LTC stays above its key support and on-chain plus derivatives signals stay constructive, the path of least resistance looks tilted to the upside rather than the other way around.











