◈   Column · 03.07.2026

Chart Patterns to Watch — July 3, 2026

6 classic TA patterns forming across major crypto today, each with its textbook measured-move target and invalidation level. Head & shoulders, double tops/bottoms and more on the 1-hour chart.

soli · 03.07.2026 · 11:59 ·events analysed 6

These are the textbook chart patterns forming across major crypto right now (July 3, 2026, 1-hour timeframe). Each one comes with its measured-move target — the classic projection traders watch — plus the level that invalidates it. We found 6 setups today: 3 bullish, 3 bearish. Not financial advice — patterns fail as often as they work.

$BNB — Falling Wedge (bullish)

LIVE◈ PATTERNVOICE OF CHAIN$BNBFALLING WEDGE1H · MEASURED MOVE · FORMING$681$630$580$529TARGET $673◈ FORECASTTARGET$673MOVE+18.9%INVALIDATION$566◈ ◈ ◈PATTERN · NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE#BNB
$BNB 1h — Falling Wedge, forming

The Falling Wedge on $BNB's 1-hour chart is doing exactly what it's supposed to: squeezing price into a shrinking range while both trendlines slope downward, but the lower boundary sells off less aggressively than the upper one caps rallies. That contraction reflects sellers running out of fresh supply even as they nominally keep control — every lower low is met with a shallower push, a classic sign of exhausted downside momentum. Traders watching this pattern are pricing in capitulation fatigue, waiting to see whether the squeeze resolves with a decisive reclaim of the upper trendline or grinds sideways into a false start. Right now the wedge is still forming, meaning the structure hasn't fully matured and the tightening range could still extend before any real signal emerges.

A confirmed breakout above the upper trendline, ideally with volume stepping up, would flip the bias bullish and suggest the wedge has done its job of absorbing sell pressure, opening the door for a reversal move on $BNB. Invalidation comes if price instead breaks down through the lower boundary or simply stalls and rotates back inside the range without ever tagging resistance, which would argue the "bullish" bias never had real conviction behind it. Falling wedges are among the more reliable reversal patterns in theory, but in practice they fail or produce fakeouts about as often as they deliver clean follow-through, so this setup deserves confirmation, not blind faith, before anyone treats the reversal as locked in.

$DOGE — Double Top (bearish)

LIVE◈ PATTERNVOICE OF CHAIN$DOGEDOUBLE TOP1H · MEASURED MOVE · FORMING$0.078$0.075$0.071$0.067NECKLINE $0.072TOP 1TOP 2TARGET $0.068◈ FORECASTTARGET$0.068MOVE-10.4%INVALIDATION$0.076◈ ◈ ◈PATTERN · NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE#DOGE
$DOGE 1h — Double Top, forming

Double Top patterns on the $DOGE 1-hour chart are the classic tell of exhausted buyers. Price rallies into resistance, gets rejected, claws back for a second attempt, and fails again at nearly the same ceiling — carving out twin peaks separated by a swing low that traders watch as the neckline. Psychologically, this is the moment where bulls who chased the first top get trapped buying the second, while smarter money starts distributing into strength. The 1-hour timeframe gives this setup enough granularity to catch intraday momentum shifts without the noise of lower timeframes, making it a favorite among short-term technical traders scanning for reversal setups.

A confirmed break below the neckline, ideally with expanding volume, would suggest the uptrend that produced both peaks is losing steam and sellers are taking control, often triggering momentum-driven follow-through as trapped longs capitulate. The setup is invalidated if price reclaims and holds above the second peak, which would flip the bearish read into a continuation story instead. Like any chart pattern, this one is probabilistic rather than predictive — double tops fail into false breakdowns or outright invalidation about as often as they play out cleanly, so confirmation matters more than the shape itself.

$NEAR — Head & Shoulders (bearish)

LIVE◈ PATTERNVOICE OF CHAIN$NEARHEAD & SHOULDERS1H · MEASURED MOVE · TRIGGERED$2.31$2.10$1.90$1.69NECKLINELSHEADRSTARGET $1.90◈ FORECASTTARGET$1.90MOVE-5.6%INVALIDATION$2.28◈ ◈ ◈PATTERN · NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE#NEAR
$NEAR 1h — Head & Shoulders, triggered

Head & Shoulders on the $NEAR 1-Hour: A Textbook Trap Confirmed

The Head & Shoulders pattern on the $NEAR 1-hour chart is the market's clearest tell that buyers are running out of gas. Three successive peaks — a rally, a stronger push to a higher high, then a weaker attempt that fails to match it — trace out the classic left shoulder, head, and right shoulder. Each rejection shows diminishing conviction from bulls, while the neckline connecting the swing lows becomes the line in the sand. Psychologically, this reflects late buyers chasing the head's high only to get trapped, while smart money quietly distributes into strength, setting the stage for the crowd to unwind those positions all at once.

With the pattern now triggered, the neckline has broken, and textbook theory says the move should extend roughly the head-to-neckline distance, ideally on a retest-and-reject of the broken neckline as new resistance. This setup gets invalidated if price reclaims back above the right shoulder, turning the breakdown into a bull trap. Worth remembering: Head & Shoulders patterns fail often, especially in choppy or low-liquidity conditions, so confirmation and risk control matter more than the shape itself.

$LTC — Double Bottom (bullish)

LIVE◈ PATTERNVOICE OF CHAIN$LTCDOUBLE BOTTOM1H · MEASURED MOVE · TRIGGERED$45.1$43.0$41.0$38.9NECKLINE $42.0BOT 1BOT 2TARGET $44.8◈ FORECASTTARGET$44.8MOVE+2.7%INVALIDATION$39.2◈ ◈ ◈PATTERN · NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE#LTC
$LTC 1h — Double Bottom, triggered

Double Bottom patterns on the $LTC 1-hour chart form when sellers make two attempts at the same floor and fail both times, leaving a distinctive "W" shape flanked by a neckline resistance. The psychology is straightforward: the first low draws in bargain hunters and short-covering, price bounces, then a second retest of that same floor either shakes out late shorts or confirms buyers are willing to defend the level again. Volume typically dries up on the second touch, a subtle tell that selling pressure is exhausted. With the pattern now triggered, the neckline break has already occurred, meaning the market has voted that the reversal thesis has legs, at least for now.

A confirmed breakout on this Double Bottom implies a shift from distribution to accumulation, with the prior neckline expected to flip into support on any retest. Momentum traders often look for a retest-and-hold of that former resistance as added confirmation before committing further. What invalidates the setup is a sharp reversal back below the second low, which would suggest the "breakout" was a liquidity grab rather than genuine demand. It's worth being honest here: double bottoms on the hourly timeframe are noisy and fail about as often as they deliver, so this is a probabilistic read on shifting order flow, not a guarantee that $LTC follows through.

$LINK — Triple Bottom (bullish)

LIVE◈ PATTERNVOICE OF CHAIN$LINKTRIPLE BOTTOM1H · MEASURED MOVE · TRIGGERED$8.11$7.72$7.33$6.93NECKLINE $7.53BOT 1BOT 2BOT 3TARGET $8.05◈ FORECASTTARGET$8.05MOVE+2.2%INVALIDATION$7.00◈ ◈ ◈PATTERN · NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE#LINK
$LINK 1h — Triple Bottom, triggered

Triple Bottom pattern on the $LINK 1-hour chart signals a bullish reversal after sustained selling pressure, forming as three distinct swing lows test the same demand zone without breaking lower. Each rejection at that floor shows sellers losing conviction — the third touch typically carries less volume and momentum than the first, a classic sign of exhaustion. Traders watch this structure because it reflects a psychological shift: buyers keep stepping in at the same price, and each failed breakdown attempt convinces more of the market that the bottom is in, setting up accumulation before a potential trend change.

With the pattern now triggered, a confirmed breakout above the resistance connecting the peaks between the lows would imply the start of a fresh bullish leg, often targeting a move equal to the pattern's height projected upward. The setup is invalidated if price rolls back below the third low, which would suggest the "support" was never real and the downtrend simply paused rather than reversed. Volume on the breakout matters — a thin, low-conviction push through resistance is far more likely to fail than a strong one. Like any chart pattern, the Triple Bottom is probabilistic, not predictive; false breakouts and failed reversals happen often, so confirmation and risk management matter more than the pattern's name.

$SOL — MACD Bearish Divergence (bearish)

LIVE◈ DIVERGENCEVOICE OF CHAIN$SOLMACD BEARISH DIV1H · MACD DIVERGENCE · FORMING$83.2$80.0$76.7PRICE ↗MACD (14)MOMENTUM ↘◈ SIGNALINDICATORMACDSIGNALBearish DivINVALIDATION$81.7◈ ◈ ◈DIVERGENCE · NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE#SOL
$SOL 1h — MACD Bearish Divergence, forming

MACD Bearish Divergence is quietly forming on the $SOL 1-hour chart, and it's the kind of setup technical traders watch closely. Price is grinding to fresh local highs while the MACD oscillator fails to confirm, printing a lower high on momentum even as candles climb. That gap between price action and the underlying indicator reflects fading conviction among buyers — each new push higher is being made on thinner participation, a classic sign that the rally is running on fumes rather than fresh demand. Late longs keep chasing while smart money quietly steps back, waiting to see who blinks first.

If this divergence confirms with a break of the recent swing structure, it would suggest sellers are wresting control and a corrective leg lower could follow, with the prior swing low acting as the line in the sand for the bearish thesis. A fresh higher high on strong volume, or the MACD histogram turning back upward in sync with price, would invalidate the pattern entirely and flip the bias back toward continuation. Divergence signals are notoriously unreliable in strongly trending markets, so treat this as an early warning to watch, not a guarantee — patterns like this fail about as often as they play out, and confirmation matters more than the setup itself.

Measured-move targets are a charting convention, not a prediction — they work partly because so many traders watch the same levels. Always pair them with the invalidation level and your own risk management.

◈   mentioned tokens
$BNB $DOGE $NEAR $LTC $LINK $SOL
◈   tags
#chart-patterns#technical-analysis#price-targets