Share this article

Dogecoin Retreats Despite Bit Origin’s $500M Allocation, RSI Hits Overbought

Corporate treasury adoption fails to stabilize the memecoin as institutional investors face mounting volatility concerns.

Jul 22, 2025, 5:27 a.m.
(CoinDesk Data)
(CoinDesk Data)

What to know:

  • Dogecoin fell nearly 7% after reaching its highest price in over 10 months, despite Bit Origin's significant treasury allocation.
  • Traders attribute the decline to overbought conditions and insufficient buying pressure, with DOGE now stabilizing above $0.26.
  • Bit Origin's $500 million DOGE strategy initially boosted prices, but the sustainability of institutional rallies remains uncertain.

Dogecoin tumbled nearly 7% over the past 24 hours, reversing gains after briefly touching the $0.29 level — its highest price in over 10 months.
The decline comes despite Bit Origin’s headline-grabbing $500 million DOGE treasury allocation, which included over 40 million tokens acquired this week. Traders cited overbought conditions and lack of sustained buy pressure as key reasons for the retracement. DOGE is now consolidating just above the $0.26 mark.

News Background

Bit Origin, a Hong Kong-based commodities and treasury firm, announced a major corporate commitment to Dogecoin with a $500 million treasury strategy involving a phased purchase of 1 billion DOGE.

The move was initially seen as a validation of DOGE as a corporate asset. However, price failed to hold highs above $0.29, raising questions over DOGE's ability to sustain institutional rallies amid broader market headwinds and historically volatile trading conditions.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

Price Action Summary

• DOGE surged to $0.29 at 17:00 on July 21 following news of Bit Origin's treasury plan, before falling to $0.27 by session close.
• The 24-hour trading range spanned $0.26–$0.29, marking a 9% volatility window.
• Final-hour trading (03:06–04:05 UTC on July 22) saw DOGE drop from $0.27 to $0.26, its lowest since Thursday, with volume rising to 37.2 million during the decline.
• DOGE is now down 7% from session highs, despite institutional buying.

Technical Analysis

• RSI spiked to 85.95 on the move to $0.29, indicating overbought conditions.
• Trading volumes peaked at 1.703 billion tokens during the breakout, nearly 2.5x the daily average.
• Resistance remains firm at $0.29 with repeated rejections.
• Support weakened from $0.27 to $0.26 as buyers failed to hold levels.
• DOGE now trades at the lower end of its recent range, risking further downside if $0.26 fails.

What Traders Are Watching

Traders are eyeing whether DOGE can hold above $0.26, which has served as short-term support amid institutional flows. Failure to hold this level may trigger a retest of the $0.245-$0.25 zone.

Any renewed buying from corporate treasuries or ETF-related speculation may help DOGE reclaim the $0.275-$0.29 resistance band — but momentum remains fragile.

More For You

Accelerating Convergence Between Traditional and On-Chain Finance in 2026?

More For You

Ark Invest's Cathie Wood says bitcoin will thrive amid ‘deflationary chaos’ created by AI and innovation

Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood in a conversation with ProCap Financial CEO Anthony Pompliano at the Bitcoin Investor Week in New York. (CoinDesk)

Exponential tech will force down prices and stress legacy finance, for which bitcoin offers a trustless alternative, said Wood at Bitcoin Investor Week.

What to know:

  • Cathie Wood argues that bitcoin is a hedge not only against inflation but also against a coming wave of technology-driven, productivity-led deflation.
  • She says rapid cost declines in artificial intelligence and other exponential technologies will trigger "deflationary chaos" that traditional financial institutions and the Federal Reserve are unprepared for.
  • In her view, bitcoin’s decentralized design and fixed supply make it a safer alternative to fragile, debt-based financial systems that could be strained by deflation and disrupted business models.