Monero gains 1% near $400 while market cap drops 2.7%, as breakout support, privacy-coin demand and short positioning soften the Fed-driven selloff.
Monero gained 1% while the broader market dropped nearly 3%, cushioned by a fresh technical breakout, sticky privacy-coin demand, and short-heavy positioning that absorbed the macro selloff rather than amplifying it.
Monero Sidesteps the Market Selloff With Its Own Bid
Consolidating After a Breakout, Not Sleeping Through the Drop
Over the past 24 hours, total crypto market cap fell about 2.7% and altcoin market cap dropped around 2.4%. In the same window, XMR rose roughly 1.1% with price oscillating around $400 and 24-hour volume near $190 million. That outperformance of approximately 3.8 percentage points explains why Monero feels "stable" compared with other coins posting several percent losses.
The stability is not inactivity but rather consolidation after a meaningful prior move. A recent technical analysis notes that XMR broke out of a falling channel with rising volume, defended support near $369.08, and pushed above resistance at $393.29. The MACD flipped into a bullish crossover, and the daily chart shows an ascending triangle with higher lows and resistance in the low $400s, with upside targets in the $470 to $500 zone if momentum continues.
By the time this 24-hour window started, much of the move had already happened. XMR is now trading inside a constructive range where dip buyers are willing to defend roughly $395 to $400, while short-term profit-taking above that zone is capped by technical resistance. That pattern naturally produces a relatively flat day even when the broader market is under pressure.
Privacy-Coin Demand Provides a Separate Bid
While much of the market trades as a single macro instrument reacting to the Fed and rates, XMR sits inside a privacy-coin narrative that is still running. A recent market piece notes Monero up around double-digit percentages earlier this week, explicitly linking the move to "steady demand for privacy-focused tokens" and pointing to the MAGIC Monero Fund launching a second fundraiser to improve fuzzing harnesses and code coverage for Monero's core codebase.
A research note from MEXC frames the trend more broadly: "Privacy coins are back," highlighting that approximately 81% of global privacy-coin volume is coming from MENA, CIS, and SEA regions, with DASH and ZEC up massively and "XMR dominating" that niche. This regionally concentrated demand for on-chain privacy represents sticky usage rather than purely leveraged speculation, keeping a bid under XMR even when the rest of the altcoin complex is being sold on macro headlines.
XMR Was Already a Relative Winner Before the Selloff
The macro backdrop over this period is messy. The Federal Reserve delivered another 25 basis point rate cut with a 9 to 3 split vote and conflicting messaging about inflation and future policy. Coverage emphasizes that markets saw "institutional confusion" rather than a cleanly dovish or hawkish signal, and risk assets repriced on that uncertainty instead of simply rallying on the cut. Bitcoin spiked toward the mid-$90,000s then retraced, many altcoins dropped several percent, and liquidations over 24 hours ran into the hundreds of millions of dollars.
A daybook-style market summary highlights that ETH, ADA, and privacy coins XMR and ZEC had been among the stronger performers earlier in the week, each jumping more than 7% in 24 hours even as other alts lagged. When zooming into the past 24 hours where the total market is down a few percent, this is a cooling phase after XMR has already been one of the relative winners. There is profit-taking at the margin, but no new XMR-specific bad news, so price drifts sideways rather than following the rest of the market lower.
Short Positioning Cushions the Downside
Derivatives positioning adds another layer of support. A recent derivatives overview notes that Bitcoin and Ethereum are seeing big swings in implied volatility around the Fed decision with options skewed toward puts, while several altcoins including XMR have deeply negative funding rates on perpetual futures, indicating speculators are leaning short.
When an asset with a fresh bullish chart and strong spot demand is heavily shorted, selloffs tend to be absorbed more easily. Shorts take profit or cover on dips instead of adding to forced selling, and any renewed spot buying can trigger small short squeezes. That fits with XMR's behavior in this window: plenty of intraday movement, but the closing level is only about 1% higher than a day ago while the broader market is down a couple of percent. Monero also trades on a narrower set of venues than most large caps, with derivatives markets smaller relative to spot, and a long-standing community of holders who value privacy and tend to hold through macro noise. This structure makes XMR less sensitive to short bursts of macro-driven leverage unwinds.
Offsetting Forces Produced Sideways Action
Monero's flat-to-slightly-positive day reflects equilibrium rather than absence of activity: a prior technical breakout and privacy-coin narrative provided underlying support, short positioning cushioned the downside, and a sticky holder base absorbed the macro shock that sent the rest of the altcoin complex lower. The market index dropped a couple of percent, but XMR simply traded around $400 in a tight band because the forces supporting it balanced the headwinds.
