$WAL|Spot Daily + 4H Observation Record

Family, looking at $WAL repeatedly in the spot market is not to find a large bullish line, but to determine if it is a structure that can be accepted by long-term capital.

First, let's look at the daily chart.

The trading volume (Vol) is stable, which is what I care about.

BOLL is generally converging, and the price is running near the middle track without obvious loss of control.

Although the MACD does not show a significant increase in volume, the fast and slow lines remain above the zero axis, indicating that the trend is not strong but not bad either.

The RSI is hovering in the neutral zone, and market sentiment is calm without overheating.

For me, this is not a market target but a structural target.

Now let's look at the 4-hour chart.

BOLL has started to flatten on the 4H, with the price repeatedly testing the lower track but not breaking down effectively. The trading volume is reduced during the retest, indicating limited selling pressure.

The MACD has shown multiple short-cycle golden crosses but without excessive expansion, a typical state of capital testing.

The RSI is held back every time it returns to the 45–50 range, indicating short-term sentiment is relatively stable.

My own judgment is very straightforward:

$WAL now does not look like a “coin to chase,” but more like an “asset to observe.” Its price behavior is consistent with the positioning of Walrus itself—focused on infrastructure, stability, and slow variables.

Vol is stable, indicating it is not purely an emotional market.

BOLL is converging, waiting for directional choice.

MACD is slightly bullish but restrained.

RSI is neutral, with capital not in a hurry.

In one sentence conclusion:

I will not use $WAL for quick-entry and exit emotional trades, but it is worth putting into the observation pool. If volume increases in conjunction with a structural breakout, it will change from “understandable” to “worth adding to the position.”

#Walrus $WAL @Walrus 🦭/acc