DOGE whales, futures traders, and spot market signals are moving in different directions as price remains flat. Data shows sustained futures buying pressure without matching spot demand. At the same time, large holders continue accumulating DOGE during recent price weakness.
Data shows futures taker buy dominance lasted 24 consecutive days through May 22. This streak reflects consistent leveraged long positioning in the derivatives market.

However, spot taker CVD data does not confirm this trend. Spot buyers showed brief activity between April 30 and May 6 before turning neutral.
Since May 7, spot taker activity has remained inactive. This indicates limited participation from non-leveraged market participants.
The divergence reflects different market behaviors across trading segments. Futures traders express conviction, while spot traders remain cautious.
Whale activity adds another layer to this divergence. According to Ali Charts, large holders accumulated over 525 million DOGE within four days.
Source: X
Santiment data shows holdings rose from about 18.31 billion to 18.93 billion DOGE. This accumulation occurred between May 18 and May 21.
The buying happened during a price drop from $0.113 to around $0.104. This shows whales purchased during declining prices rather than rising momentum.
Futures CVD tracks leveraged trader activity in derivatives markets. Spot CVD measures actual buying pressure in exchange order books.
These two indicators reflect different types of market participation. Alignment between them often supports sustained price movement.
In this case, the signals remain disconnected. Futures traders continue buying, while spot demand remains inactive.
This creates an imbalance between leveraged positions and underlying demand. The price has remained stable despite this divergence.
DOGE whale accumulation does not directly impact spot CVD readings. Large holders often move tokens off exchanges after buying.
This reduces available supply without creating immediate buy pressure in visible markets. Therefore, accumulation affects supply rather than short-term demand.
The reduced exchange supply may influence future price sensitivity. Smaller available supply can increase price impact from new demand.
The current structure reflects preparation rather than immediate movement. Price action continues to reflect unresolved market tension.
As of May 22, futures buy dominance remains intact, while spot activity stays neutral and whale accumulation continues.
The post DOGE Whales Buy Dip While Futures and Spot Data Split appeared first on CoinCentral.


