Technical Analysis

PYTH Technical Analysis February 1, 2026: Risk and Stop Loss

PYTH

PYTH/USDT

$0.0539
-7.86%
24h Volume

$31,604,812.15

24h H/L

$0.0585 / $0.0476

Change: $0.0109 (22.90%)

Funding Rate

-0.0205%

Shorts pay

Data provided by COINOTAG DATALive data
PYTH
PYTH
Daily

$0.0539

2.86%

Volume (24h): -

Resistance Levels
Resistance 3$0.0762
Resistance 2$0.0608
Resistance 1$0.0561
Price$0.0539
Support 1$0.0510
Support 2$0.0476
Support 3$0.0272
Pivot (PP):$0.0535
Trend:Downtrend
RSI (14):39.3
SC
Sarah Chen
(09:48 PM UTC)
5 min read
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PYTH is trading at the $0.05 level under downtrend pressure, and although short-term volatility is low, bearish signals are increasing the risk of capital erosion. Investors should protect their positions with tight stop loss strategies before a break of the main $0.0476 support, focusing on maintaining a risk/reward ratio above 1:2.

Market Volatility and Risk Environment

PYTH's current price is pinned at the $0.05 level, with a slight 1.16% decline observed in the last 24 hours. The daily range remained quite narrow at $0.05 - $0.05, indicating low short-term volatility. However, volume is at a moderate $14.98M level, and the trend continues as a downtrend. RSI at 35.28 is approaching oversold territory, which offers short-term bounce potential, but with Supertrend bearish and price below EMA20 ($0.06), the overall risk environment is high. In multi-timeframe (MTF) analysis, a total of 9 strong levels were identified across 1D, 3D, and 1W timeframes: 1 support/3 resistance on 1D, 1 support/2 resistance on 3D, and 1 support/2 resistance on 1W. This structure increases the risk that upward movements will be limited by resistances. Combined with the general volatility of the crypto market and BTC's downtrend, sudden dumps in altcoins like PYTH can accelerate capital loss. ATR (Average True Range)-based volatility calculations may be misleading with recently narrowing ranges; investors should prepare for expanding volatility, as 20-30% rapid drops are common in downtrends.

Risk/Reward Ratio Assessment

Potential Reward: Target Levels

In a bullish scenario, the first target is $0.0939 (score: 31), offering about 87.8% upside potential from the current price. Reaching this target is difficult without breaking intermediate resistances at $0.0561 (score:68) and $0.0596 (score:67); the oversold condition in RSI could trigger a short-term bounce. However, due to the downtrend structure, reward potential may remain limited, as MTF resistance density blocks upward movements.

Potential Risk: Stop Levels

Bearish target $0.0166 (score:22), carrying 66.8% downside risk from the current price. A break of the main support at $0.0476 (score:79/100) is critical for trend invalidation; positions can erode rapidly below this level. Short-term risk is 4.8% on a drop below $0.0476, offering a theoretical R/R of 1:18, but in practice, reversal probability is low due to bearish trend. Investors should always keep risk lower than reward in every scenario.

Stop Loss Placement Strategies

Stop loss placement is the cornerstone of capital preservation. For PYTH, strategic points: 1-2% below the main support at $0.0476 (e.g., $0.0465-$0.0470), which captures the breakout structure and minimizes whipsaws. ATR-based stop: Assuming 5-7% for the last 14-day ATR (to be calculated), stop distance can be set at 1-1.5 ATR – this provides volatility-adjusted protection. Structural stop: Below the last swing low, a trailing stop can be used for EMA20 ($0.06) support. Educationally, percentage-based (%2-3 risk/position) or volatility-adjusted (Chandelier Exit) methods should be preferred over fixed pip stops. In downtrends, tight stops may lead to early exits, but they prevent capital erosion; for example, closing a position at a 5% loss after a $0.0476 break won't impact the portfolio by 20% in a series of losses. Always backtest and test on a demo account.

Position Sizing Considerations

Position sizing is the heart of risk management and should never be done with fixed amounts. Kelly Criterion or fixed fractional (%1-2 risk/position) approaches provide an educational foundation: For example, in a $10K portfolio with 1% risk ($100), at $0.05 entry and $0.0476 stop (risk $0.0024/share), a maximum of 41,666 shares can be taken. Volatility adjustment: Reduce size in high ATR (e.g., if ATR >10%, drop to 0.5%). For correlation risk: In PYTH-BTC pair trades, reduce size by 50%. Use anti-martingale (increase on wins) instead of pyramiding. Conceptually, size can be increased at R/R >1:2 but total risk should never exceed 5%. These rules keep drawdowns under 10% and ensure long-term capital growth – every trader should calculate their own risk tolerance.

Risk Management Outcomes

Key takeaways: With downtrend and bearish Supertrend, PYTH is high risk; $0.0476 support is the main trigger. R/R potential looks attractive but resistance abundance and BTC pressure limit the reward. Even if volatility narrows, expansion brings dumps – protect capital with 1%/position risk. Check detailed PYTH Spot Analysis and PYTH Futures Analysis. Always maintain diversification and cash reserves; lack of news flow shouldn't mislead – stay cautious across the market.

Bitcoin Correlation

BTC at $77,048 level in downtrend (1.30% decline), Supertrend bearish. Main supports $75,720, $73,441; breaks could drag altcoins like PYTH below $0.04. Resistances $77,841-$80,623; if BTC doesn't recover, PYTH correlation (0.8+) creates negative impact. Rising BTC dominance crushes alts – BTC below $75K stop mandatory for PYTH longs.

This analysis uses Chief Analyst Devrim Cacal's market views and methodology.

Market Analyst: Sarah Chen

Technical analysis and risk management specialist

This analysis is not investment advice. Do your own research.

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Sarah Chen

Expert technical analysis and market insights. Follow us for the latest cryptocurrency analysis.

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