- Shiba Inu broke below a previously marked demand zone
- Price may continue lower to take out more liquidity
- A new H2 demand zone could provide support if price leaves liquidity above
In the last article on Shiba Inu, we talked about a couple of possibilities — remember?

Either the price was going to drop and take out some liquidity sitting below, or it was going to react from that demand zone we had mapped out.
Well, fast forward to now — price just broke right through that demand.

It didn’t even blink.
So, What Now?
This is one of those moments where things get interesting. And slightly messy.
Shiba could continue falling — grabbing more liquidity on the way down. Honestly, that wouldn’t surprise me at all. I’ve seen it before, where the price crashes through a level and just keeps hunting stops like a heat-seeking missile.

Especially in meme coins like SHIB, where retail tends to cluster their positions in obvious spots.
But… there’s also this H2 demand sitting just below. It hasn’t been touched yet, and it’s quietly waiting there like a potential springboard.
If — and that’s a big if — price starts leaving liquidity above near that H2 zone, we might get a nice reaction. It’s the kind of setup where the market dips, fakes out everyone again, then launches. Fast.
It wouldn’t be the first time Shiba Inu pulled a stunt like that.
Trading This? Embrace the Uncertainty
I’ll be honest with you — this isn’t a clean situation.
We’re somewhere in between a breakdown and a fakeout. And I’ve learned the hard way that trading in the middle of confusion can either make you look like a genius… or have you rage quitting Telegram for a week. True story.
That said, here’s the mindset I try to keep when things look this unclear:
We’re not here to predict perfectly. We’re here to prepare intelligently.
These are scenarios, not prophecies. The market could respect the next demand and run… or slice through everything and ruin the weekend. That’s just the game we’re in.
Shiba Inu Price: Key Zones and Eyes on Liquidity
Let’s break it down cleanly:
- Previous demand got broken.
- Liquidity is still in play beneath.
- New H2 demand zone could offer a reaction if price starts building liquidity above it.
That’s the playbook I’m watching.
Will it go that way? No one knows. But if it does — I want to be ready, not surprised.