- Solana tapped liquidity above and reacted cleanly to an H4 demand with imbalance — textbook move
- There’s still liquidity sitting both above and below price, making the next direction tricky
- Watch the imbalance zones and liquidity pockets — they often reveal the true market story
In our last Solana analysis, we pointed out how price had just grabbed liquidity from above — a classic trap move — and might dip lower to clean up the mess left below.

And guess what? It kinda did… but only partially.

If you look closely at the H4 chart, Solana reacted exactly at a demand zone that had left an imbalance.
Now, if you’re not familiar with that term, let me explain it quickly — because it’s super important.
What Is an Imbalance in Price?
An imbalance happens when price moves too quickly in one direction — leaving behind a gap between buy and sell orders. It’s like the market sprinted so fast that it didn’t bother filling in all the footprints.
I like to think of it like skipping steps while running down stairs — eventually, you might need to go back and touch those skipped ones.
In trading, price often returns to these imbalances to “fill” them, making it a spot worth watching closely.
The Bounce and the Liquidity Puzzle
So back to Solana — after that upper liquidity sweep, price dropped and bounced right from that demand with imbalance. Pretty clean reaction. But here’s where things get interesting…

We now have liquidity sitting above current price, which might act as a magnet before any deeper drop. And yes, there’s still liquidity waiting below too. It’s a real “which way first?” kind of setup.
It reminds me of when I used to play that old-school arcade claw machine — you’d spot two plush toys lined up and could only go for one.
You never knew which was easier to grab until you tried. Solana’s price action kinda feels like that right now.
Solana Scenarios: What I’m Watching
Here’s what I’m keeping an eye on for this Solana price prediction:
- Scenario 1 – Short-term bullish: Price might push upward first, targeting the liquidity above — especially with that nearby demand + imbalance supporting it.
- Scenario 2 – Deeper correction: If buyers lose steam, we could revisit that uncollected liquidity down below — and that would make sense structure-wise.
Let’s stay real though: we never trade based on certainty. The market has a habit of humbling anyone who gets too cocky. These are possibilities — not promises.