Dogecoin traded at $0.09194 over the past 24 hours, up 0.31%, according to CoinMarketCap data. Its market capitalization rose 0.41% to $15.53 billion. Trading volume climbed 13.51% to $1.23 billion, while the volume-to-market-cap ratio reached 7.95%. The token’s circulating supply stood at 168.96 billion DOGE, with no maximum cap. Fully diluted valuation came in at $15.52 billion.
DOGE started the period near $0.092 and showed early weakness before a sharp evening move pushed the price above $0.096. That jump briefly lifted momentum and drew stronger trading activity.
The rally did not last. Sellers returned overnight and pushed the token back toward the $0.091 range by morning. Even so, Dogecoin stayed above the $0.090 mark, which remained a key short-term support level.
The pullback left the token in a narrow range after a brief breakout attempt. Volume stayed active, but price direction weakened as buying pressure faded.
The wider crypto market continues to limit Dogecoin’s recovery. Bitcoin remains below the $70,000 level and shows limited strength. XRP and Ethereum are also consolidating, pointing to a weaker risk appetite across major digital assets.
That backdrop often affects meme coins more sharply. When traders grow cautious, speculative assets usually lose momentum first. Dogecoin has often performed better when the broader market shows stronger confidence.
The total crypto market capitalization stands near $2.38 trillion. At the same time, trading activity has slowed across much of the sector. With lower participation and softer sentiment, meme coins face tighter liquidity and weaker demand.
Sosovalue data showed zero daily net inflows for Dogecoin ETFs from Grayscale, 21Shares, and Bitwise. That trend has held since Feb. 3. During that stretch, total traded value ranged from $150,000 to $1.37 million.
The same pattern appeared throughout most of December and January. Although a few sessions posted inflows, outflows also appeared, and most days ended with no net additions. Grayscale’s spot Dogecoin ETF, GDOG, opened with $1.4 million in trading volume, below analyst expectations.
Earlier this year, Dogecoin and other meme coins briefly led a market rebound, and the 2x Dogecoin ETF outpaced peers during that move. Still, the rally reversed quickly, and DOGE returned to multimonth lows. Dogecoin has now fallen for five straight months since September 2025 and opened 2026 with losses in both of the first two months.
Large-holder activity has also remained part of the picture. Dogecoin, like many older coins, has gone through periods when a small number of wallets controlled a large share of supply. When the price nears key levels, profit-taking from those holders can add selling pressure and cap breakouts. In a range-bound market, that pressure can keep recovery attempts short-lived.
Also Read: Dogecoin Nears Multi-Year Breakout: Is a Big Move Coming?
Dogecoin price held above the $0.090 support level despite fading intraday gains. Flat DOGE ETF inflows, weak meme-coin sentiment, and softer broader market conditions continued to limit upside. For now, traders will likely watch volume, support strength, and wider crypto sentiment for the next move.