- TRON is currently accumulating liquidity on both sides while moving sideways on the daily
- There’s a supply zone above that may cause short-term rejection if price reaches it
- TRON is a long-term DeFi infrastructure project focused on scalability and decentralization
In the last update, we talked about TRON’s frustratingly slow but deliberate movement on the daily timeframe. I said it was accumulating liquidity—and that still holds true.

If you zoom out and really study the chart, you’ll notice something clear: TRX is in full lateral mode. It’s not rushing anywhere.
Price has been chopping sideways, gathering liquidity on both ends like it’s preparing for something… but refusing to give us the signal just yet.
And if you ask me? TRON is one of those coins that demands patience. It doesn’t move fast, even on the daily. But when it does — it makes it count.
Let’s Talk About the TRON Project (Real Quick)
TRON isn’t just another smart contract platform lost in the sea of Layer-1s. It was created by Justin Sun, and while it’s had its fair share of drama, the project itself is laser-focused on decentralizing the web.
It runs high-speed, scalable infrastructure for dApps and DeFi, and it’s got some serious throughput — we’re talking 2,000+ TPS with near-zero fees. Oh, and it’s behind USDT-TRC20, which plays a huge role in stablecoin transfers across exchanges.
I once tried sending USDT via TRON to avoid Ethereum’s gas fees — and man, it felt like I’d discovered a cheat code. Fast. Cheap. Done.
The Chart: Liquidity Above & Below, Supply Lurking
So let’s get back to the chart.

TRX has been sideways for weeks, creating that classic double-edged setup — liquidity both above and below. It’s like price is baiting both sides of the market. Retail longs and shorts alike are getting played.
Above? We’ve got a supply zone waiting.
If price pushes up and taps into it, I wouldn’t be surprised to see a small rejection. Nothing dramatic necessarily, but just enough to trigger some stop hunts and fakeouts.
Below? More liquidity sits there too, and if the market decides to take a detour before the real move, that’s the pool I’d be watching.
So What Now?
Simple: wait and see.
I know — that’s not what anyone wants to hear. But with TRON, rushing never works. Price is setting up for something, and whether it’s a sweep to the upside or a fakeout down, we need confirmation — not guesses.
If price hits that upper supply and reacts, that could be a short scalp. If we get a clear structure shift after a liquidity grab, that’s the kind of entry I wait for.
But remember — none of this is guaranteed. These are possibilities, not certainties. The market does what it wants, when it wants.