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Shiba Inu heads into the weekend under mounting pressure. On-chain data shows that more than 531 billion SHIB flowed into exchanges over the past 24 hours—well above recent norms—tilting short-term control toward sellers. With technical signals weak and weekend liquidity thinning, downside risks are increasing.
More than 531B SHIB moved to exchanges in 24 hours, sharply increasing sell-side supply. Tokens sent to trading platforms become immediately available for sale, expanding active supply. When large transfers occur without prior signs of accumulation, traders typically interpret them as positioning to reduce exposure rather than the initiation of new long positions.
Recent price behavior aligns with that interpretation. SHIB trades near $0.00000571, down 5.03% over the past 24 hours. The asset remains below key moving averages, including the 26-period EMA and broader trend indicators, keeping bearish momentum intact.
Rebound attempts have shown weak volume, which can reduce the likelihood of a sustained recovery. In this context, even if selling pressure eases temporarily, limited buying participation makes it harder for SHIB to reclaim and hold important technical levels.
Weekend trading conditions add additional risk. Participation tends to drop on Saturdays and Sundays, reducing the depth of resting buy orders. In thinner markets, even moderate selling pressure can trigger larger price swings than during weekday sessions.
On-chain flow dynamics reinforce a distribution narrative: elevated exchange inflows often precede volatility expansions, particularly when the price structure is already weak. Large holders may gradually move tokens onto exchanges, allowing the price to appear stable while sell-side supply builds within order books. If demand does not absorb the increased supply, further downside becomes more probable.
Until volume strengthens and SHIB reclaims key technical levels, the outlook remains defensively positioned. A decisive break below nearby support could accelerate momentum as short-term traders respond.

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