Michaël van de Poppe, the Dutch market commentator known for his blunt technical reads, suggested today that a weary altcoin market may finally be turning a corner, and Chainlink is already showing the first signs. In a post that echoed through crypto X/Twitter, van de Poppe pointed out that many altcoins “have been correcting all the way down to their wick of the 10th of October,” and that for the first time since the summer, $LINK is clawing back above its 21-day moving average. It is a move, he said, that could set the stage for an upward run over the next two to three months.
Price action on Friday appeared to back him up. Chainlink was trading around the $12.90–$13.00 area, up roughly 4–6% in 24 hours depending on the feed, after a flurry of small green candles that pushed the token through short-term resistance and nudged it over the 21-day average used by many traders to judge the near-term trend.
The move matters because, as van de Poppe argued, several altcoins appear to have retraced only to October’s low-wick levels. These are the areas that often attract sharp counter-moves when buyers step in to clean up liquidity. If Chainlink can sustain a close above the 21-day line, the immediate technical story flips from a grinding downtrend to a consolidation with an upward bias. That’s exactly the scenario short-term bulls would like to see: a steady series of higher closes, increasing volume, and the 21-day acting as pullback support rather than resistance.
Market voices and price models are already starting to peg modest near-term upside for LINK should the breakout hold. A handful of exchange research notes and forecasting services published in recent weeks point to a $13.50–$15.50 range as the first meaningful resistance cluster, with some models seeing room for a more extended recovery if broader risk appetite returns. Those scenarios depend heavily on Bitcoin and large-cap market direction, but for traders watching altcoin leadership, Chainlink’s action this week is notable.
On-chain and market-flow indicators also offer mixed signals. Volume spiked compared with the very quiet December sessions, suggesting renewed interest, but overall macro liquidity and Bitcoin’s behavior will likely dictate whether the gains are a temporary relief rally or the start of a multi-month leg higher. Experts picked up on the breakout too, reporting a roughly six percent intraday gain and calling the move the “first breach since the summer,” language that mirrors van de Poppe’s line that altcoins broadly might be ready to recover from the autumn washout.
As always with technical breakouts, the proof is in the follow-through. Traders will be watching whether LINK can hold the 21-day moving average on daily closes and whether higher timeframe resistances, notably the $14.50–$15.50 band identified by several analysts, give way on volume. If those levels are cleared, the narrative of a two-to-three month recovery that van de Poppe sketched becomes a reasonable base case; if Chainlink fails to maintain the short-term moving average, the bounce risks fading and re-testing October lows.
For now, Chainlink sits at an inflection point: a small but meaningful technical victory for bulls and an early signal that the broader altcoin complex could stop slipping and begin to base. Whether that turns into sustained gains will hinge on follow-through buying, Bitcoin’s next directional move, and whether the current uptick in volume grows into a structural return of liquidity to the market.


