
HYPE’s social sentiment peaked before the price did – here’s what that divergence actually means for traders chasing $250.
- New ATH $64.60, +40% weekly on Binance.
- Crowd certainty peaked May 21 at $58.66.
- Price climbed 9% more after sentiment peaked.
- Social sentiment dropped 72% from its 402 peak.
- Post-peak avg sentiment: 113 vs 402 at top.
HYPE hit a new all-time high of $64.6 on Binance yesterday, May 24, capping a 40% weekly surge that’s turned every crypto feed into a $250 price target bulletin board. The momentum is real. The chart is objectively strong, price bounced from a December low near $22, reclaimed all three major moving averages (SMA50 at $44, SMA100 at $39, SMA200 at $34), and RSI is sitting at 75, hot but not historically extreme for a breakout leg.

But there’s a data layer underneath that rally that most of the $250 crowd isn’t talking about, and it’s the part that matters most for what happens next.
The crowd peaked four days before the price did
Maksim Balance, founder of Santiment Intelligence, flagged something worth sitting with: social sentiment on HYPE peaked on May 21 at a balance score of 402, nearly 10x the April daily average. That was the moment crypto Twitter was most certain, most loud, most unified in its conviction. The interesting part? The price on May 21 was $58.6. It then climbed another 9% to the ATH while sentiment had already started collapsing.

By the days following that May 21 peak, the social sentiment balance had dropped to an average of 113 – down 72% from the top of crowd certainty. The people most certain about HYPE were already done talking about it when the actual price peak arrived.
This is a textbook sentiment divergence, and it cuts both ways. It tells you the move wasn’t purely hype-driven vapor – real buying continued even as the crowd noise faded. But it also tells you the loudest believers already got what they wanted, or gave up expecting it. When the certainty crowd exits, you lose a key source of fresh retail inflow.
What the chart confirms and what it doesn’t
The daily chart confirms the structural case: this isn’t a random spike. Price has been in a methodical recovery since the December 2025 lows, with higher lows all the way up. The recent vertical move into ATH territory came on the highest weekly volume in months, which rules out a low-liquidity fake-out.
But ATH territory is also where charts stop providing historical reference points. There’s no resistance overhead because there’s never been price overhead. That’s both the opportunity and the risk, nobody knows where sellers will appear because there’s no prior supply zone to anchor to.
RSI at 75 isn’t a sell signal by itself. During the September 2025 run, RSI stayed elevated for weeks. But when it eventually cooled, price gave back a significant chunk before finding support. The SMA50 at $44 is the first meaningful floor below current price, that’s a 30% drawdown from ATH if sentiment stays deflated and momentum stalls.
The $250 target: the structure is real, the timing isn’t guaranteed
$250 from $64 is roughly a 4x. That would put HYPE’s market cap somewhere in the top five crypto assets at current supply levels. Not impossible, but the macro backdrop isn’t clean right now. The ongoing Iran-US tensions are injecting real uncertainty into risk assets across the board, and crypto isn’t immune to that. An escalation headline can erase a week of gains in hours, regardless of fundamentals.
What makes HYPE’s case different from most altcoins, though, is that the buying pressure isn’t coming from retail momentum alone. It’s structurally engineered. Hyperliquid routes nearly all perpetual trading fees into an Assistance Fund that continuously buys back HYPE from the open market, this isn’t a one-time buyback program, it’s a revenue flywheel that runs as long as the platform generates volume. And volume has been growing.
On top of that, the launch of the first U.S. spot HYPE ETFs by Grayscale and 21Shares has opened the institutional channel, these funds are required to hold physical HYPE tokens to back their shares, meaning inflows directly translate into spot demand with no leverage or synthetic exposure. Venture funds and digital asset managers are layering on top of that with long-term accumulation positions, adding another layer of non-speculative buying.
Then there’s the platform itself. Hyperliquid has moved well beyond a perpetuals exchange. The rollout of HIP-3 pre-IPO markets for private companies and HIP-4 prediction markets has turned it into something closer to a financial super-app, one that’s capturing market share in verticals that most DeFi protocols haven’t touched. That positions the network as a top-tier revenue generator, which feeds back into the buyback engine, which feeds back into price.
So the $250 target requires a 4x from here, in an uncertain macro environment, at a moment when crowd sentiment is 72% below its recent peak. The structural case is genuinely strong. The timing case is the part that needs watching.
The real question isn’t whether HYPE goes to $250
It’s whether you’re buying into a post-sentiment ATH with fresh conviction and a clear thesis, or whether you’re borrowing someone else’s target because it appeared in your feed 40 times this week. Markets don’t punish optimism. They punish borrowed optimism – especially when the crowd that generated it has already moved on.
The structural buyers are still here. The noise crowd isn’t. That gap is where the next move gets decided.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.



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