- TRON surged 13%, taking the upside liquidity we marked in the last analysis
- Now that price has tapped a supply zone, a short-term dip could occur
- On H4, two trendline liquidity areas are in play, with potential demand zones for a bullish reaction
Not gonna lie — seeing TRON push up 13% this past week felt satisfying.
Why? Because we called it.
In the last article, I shared how the price was accumulating on the daily, sitting right in a zone of uncertainty — but with liquidity sitting both above and below.

I mentioned that those high timeframe wicks? They weren’t random. They were liquidity magnets, and we were watching for a breakout.

Fast forward to now: TRON did exactly that. It took the upside liquidity, tapped right into the supply zone we had marked, and paused.
Classic.
Daily Played Out – But Now We Could See a Short-Term Reaction
With that daily liquidity sweep complete, things might shift a little.
We’re still in a bullish structure, yes. But once liquidity gets grabbed, especially at a well-defined supply level, you’ve got to ask: is this the start of a pullback, or just a breather before continuation?
Honestly? Either is possible. But one thing stands out to me: the lower liquidity that’s still untouched.
It’s like an itch the market hasn’t scratched yet.
H4 View – Trendline Liquidity and Demand Zones in Play
Zooming into the 4H chart, the picture sharpens.

We’ve got two clean trendlines, both acting as liquidity traps. You’ve probably seen this before — trendline buyers stacking in, stop-losses resting underneath. That’s tasty liquidity for smart money.
So what’s one very real possibility?
- TRON dips, hunts that trendline liquidity,
- Tags one of the demand zones below,
- Then reacts from there and continues the bigger trend.
Now, I’m not saying that’s what will happen. But if I had to bet on a move that makes sense both technically and structurally — that’s the one I’m watching.
Why This All Matters – and Why It Might Not
I always like to end with this — because it’s important.
Yes, this analysis is detailed. Yes, these zones are based on real logic, not just random lines on a chart.
But the market doesn’t owe us anything.
Price can do whatever it wants. It can respect the levels we’ve mapped — or ignore them completely and go on a wild run. That’s the uncomfortable truth in trading.
What we do instead is play the best probabilities. We track liquidity, structure, and reactions.
We prepare, but we don’t predict with arrogance.
Because in the end, uncertainty is part of the game — and learning to live with it? That’s where the edge is.