- Solana broke bullish structure on the daily and continued upward, skipping the expected H4 demand
- After sweeping major liquidity, a short-term retracement is now possible
- H1 demand zone could offer a solid re-entry for the next leg up
I’m going to be honest with you — this one stung a little.
In my last few breakdowns on Solana, we mapped out a clean bullish scenario: the daily structure had flipped long, and we were tracking price as it carved a higher low. Our ideal setup?

We were waiting for a retracement into an H4 demand zone, right below current price. It all made sense — liquidity was stacked underneath, the confluence felt solid.

But… the market had other plans.
Solana Broke Structure – But Never Came Back for Us
Instead of pulling back into our zone (like a good little setup should), price launched earlier than expected.
It barely missed our demand and just went off — straight through the highs we had marked as liquidity targets.

That’s part of the game though, right?
I’ve been there more times than I care to count — setting alerts, feeling that quiet confidence, and then boom: market skips the entry and leaves you watching from the sidelines.

But the important thing is not to chase. Because now that Solana has swept those two major highs on the daily… we might actually be getting a second chance.
Could We See a Short-Term Pullback?
Here’s where things get interesting.
Now that the daily liquidity has been taken, Solana may cool off a bit. Nothing drastic — I’m not calling for a macro trend reversal — but a short-term retracement makes perfect sense here.
Zooming in: H1 Timeframe
On the 1-hour chart, I’m watching a clean setup forming. There’s a local demand zone below current price that looks very attractive.
And here’s the twist: while the price is slowly grinding up, it’s also leaving liquidity above. Which means… yep — we might see another sweep, or a trap, or both.

I can totally see this scenario playing out:
- Price dips into the H1 demand,
- Builds a base,
- Then continues the daily bullish structure.
Again — not guaranteed, but it’s a play I’ll be watching.
Liquidity 101 — Just So We’re Clear
When I talk about “liquidity above and below,” I’m referring to clusters of stop-losses. These often sit above swing highs (buy-side liquidity) or below swing lows (sell-side liquidity).
The market loves to hunt them — especially before making its real move.
So when I say Solana might dip, it’s not random. It’s calculated. It’s based on how price interacts with these liquidity pockets.
But Here’s the Truth…
As always — and I mean always — the market can do whatever it wants. I’ve seen perfect setups fail and weird setups print miracles.
These scenarios? They’re just probabilities. I’m not here to sell you certainty. I’m here to share my process, my observations, and the zones I’m watching. If Solana respects them — great. If not? We adapt and move on.
That’s the mindset that keeps you in this game long enough to win.