- ASTER remains in a firm downtrend as broader market weakness and BTC volatility weigh on sentiment
- Hyperliquid’s dominance in DEX volume and open interest continues to overshadow Aster’s market position
- A short-term relief bounce is possible, but a reclaim above $0.81 and $1 is needed to shift the trend
Aster [ASTER] has been under steady pressure on the charts, and the recent dip didn’t come out of nowhere. The short-term sell-off largely followed broader market turbulence after Bitcoin [BTC] slipped below the $94.5k support zone, dragging risk appetite lower across the board.
Zooming out, though, ASTER’s problems run deeper than a single BTC move. The token has been stuck in a longer-term downtrend that reflects shifting market sentiment. Data shared by Cryptorank on X added another layer to the story, showing that Hyperliquid [HYPE] has clearly pulled ahead as the more dominant decentralized exchange. By both volume and 24-hour open interest, Hyperliquid sits firmly in first place, leaving Aster trailing. Until Aster can claw back some of that market share, it’s hard to expect its token price to tell a different story.
Aster flirts with another bearish breakdown
On the daily chart, the picture is still rough. In mid-December, ASTER lost the psychological $1 level, a move that left behind a clear imbalance between roughly $0.83 and $0.91. Early January brought a modest bounce, but it never really challenged that supply zone. Instead, price stalled around $0.813 and rolled over again, printing yet another lower high. For any meaningful bullish trend to even start forming, a sustained move back above $1 would be required, and that feels distant right now.
The indicators don’t offer much comfort either. Seller control remains obvious. The Accumulation/Distribution line has been drifting lower over the past couple of weeks, hinting at ongoing distribution rather than quiet accumulation. The Awesome Oscillator briefly flashed a weak bullish crossover over the weekend, but that signal didn’t last long and was quickly pushed back below the zero line. Meanwhile, the DMI, combined with fresh price lows, confirms that the broader trend is still firmly bearish.

So, what comes next for ASTER?
Despite the gloomy structure, some short-term relief isn’t out of the question. ASTER has already fallen a long way, and markets rarely move in straight lines forever. Using the most recent leg down, Fibonacci retracement levels show the 78.6% level around $0.695 lining up closely with a supply zone between $0.683 and $0.703. Interestingly, this area used to act as demand, defended by bulls for several weeks. That defense has now faded, though, as selling pressure drained buyer strength.
This sets up an awkward but familiar scenario. The higher timeframe remains clearly bearish, yet lower timeframe action hints that a bounce could form. Previously, bears showed just how strong they were when price couldn’t even make it back to the $0.83 supply zone. A similar outcome is possible again, where price struggles to fully test the $0.68–$0.70 region, especially if Bitcoin fails to reclaim $94.5k in the days ahead.
For longer-term participants, patience still matters. A move back above $0.81, and eventually a reclaim of $1, would be needed before buyers can step in with real confidence. Until then, ASTER looks more like a market waiting for relief, not one ready for a trend reversal.











