Ethereum nears its October descending trendline as analyst MoreCryptoOnline warns a breakout without five Elliott Waves could trigger a sharp 10-30% fake-out rally.
Ethereum is knocking on a door that’s been shut since October. The descending trendline, sitting overhead for months, is now within reach. Everyone is watching. That part, at least, is not in dispute.
What happens next is.
According to MoreCryptoOnline on X, the setup warrants serious caution. The account flagged ETH’s approach to the descending trendline from October, warning that a clean break above it, without five completed Elliott Waves to the upside, is most likely a fake breakout. Not a real one. A trap dressed as momentum.
The Breakout Everyone Sees Is the One to Doubt
Price movement and trend change are not the same thing. That distinction sits at the center of the warning MoreCryptoOnline issued. The post described a scenario where ETH briefly overshoots the trendline, possibly 10 to 30 percent, before the real sell-off begins. Quick move. Fast reversal.
The Elliott Wave framework matters here. Five completed waves to the upside signal an impulse, a genuine directional shift with structure behind it. Anything short of that and a break above the trendline is noise, per the analysis, an overshoot that gets faded hard.
ETH has been navigating layered resistance since its recovery from the $1,765 low, with analysts repeatedly flagging the gap zone between $2,474 and $2,634 as the next upside test before any structural confirmation is possible.
What the Chart Is and Isn’t Saying
The trendline in question traces back to October. It has capped multiple recovery attempts since then. Each rejection has reinforced its weight. Now, ETH approaches it again, and this time the market is watching more closely, which is exactly the problem.
Markets don’t tend to reward the obvious move cleanly. A breakout that everyone has circled on their charts has a way of becoming a liquidation event for late buyers. MoreCryptoOnline’s read lines up with that logic.
The fake breakout scenario works mechanically. Price clears the line. Retail buyers chase it. Volume pumps briefly. Then the structure collapses without confirmation from wave count. Sellers who’ve been waiting at the line absorb the move.
Elliott Wave analysis around Ethereum’s broader structure has pointed to corrective B-wave dynamics for months, with MoreCryptoOnline among those tracking the setup closely.
Don’t Confuse the Move for the Message
Thirty percent sounds like a rally. On a longer chart, it would look like one. But thirty percent built on a corrective wave, one that lacks the internal structure of a real impulse move, sets up an equally sharp unwind.
That’s the core warning. Not that ETH cannot go up. It can. A 10 to 30 percent extension above the trendline is still price appreciation in nominal terms. The issue is what it means, or rather, what it doesn’t.
A price move above a trendline is not the same as a trend change. MoreCryptoOnline made that point directly. The distinction is technical but the consequence is financial.
Traders watching for confirmation of a structural shift should wait for five completed waves before treating any break as legitimate, per the analysis. Anything else is just the line giving way temporarily.
This article is based on technical analysis and commentary from a public social media source. It does not constitute financial or investment advice. Always conduct independent research before making any trading decisions.
