Tron's native token TRX is trading at $0.33, caught in a narrow range as its moving averages compress — a classic volatility squeeze. The taker buy ratio, a measure of aggressive buying versus selling, stands at 2.9:1, signaling that buyers are dominating the order book. With the squeeze tightening, traders are setting a long bias with a first price target of $0.43.
What the moving averages are saying
When short-term and long-term moving averages converge, it often means a big move is coming — but the direction isn't clear from the averages alone. In TRX's case, the compression has been building over recent sessions, and the price has been stuck around $0.33. That level has become a pivot point. A break above or below could set the next trend.
Buying pressure in the order book
The taker buy ratio of 2.9:1 means that for every sell order that gets filled immediately, nearly three buy orders are being taken. That's a lopsided appetite for TRX at current prices. It doesn't guarantee a rally, but it does show that market participants are willing to pay up to get in. That kind of demand can push prices higher if it persists.
The $0.43 target and what it takes to get there
The first price objective for the long bias is $0.43 — roughly a 30% gain from here. That level likely represents a prior resistance or a technical target based on the squeeze pattern. To reach it, TRX needs to break above the compressed range with volume. If the taker buy ratio stays elevated, that breakout becomes more plausible. But if the squeeze resolves to the downside, the same ratio could flip as sellers rush to exit.
For now, the data points to a bullish setup, but the market hasn't confirmed it yet. The next few sessions will show whether the buying pressure can push TRX through the squeeze or if the range holds.




