BNB Hovers Near $830 as Traders Cut Risk Amid Pullback
BNB traded near $832 on December 18, holding close to the lower end of its recent range after falling roughly 4% in the past 24 hours. Over the past week, the coin has fluctuated between $830 and $899, marking a 4.3% weekly decline, while the 30-day drop reaches 8.4%, leaving BNB about 39% below its October peak of $1,369.
Trading activity picked up as prices moved lower, with 24-hour volume climbing 33.6% to $2.51 billion. At the same time, derivatives data shows that while trading volume surged 48% to $2.03 billion, open interest fell 1.72% to $1.33 billion. This suggests that many traders are closing positions and reducing leverage rather than taking new bets amid the recent volatility.
Technically, BNB is trading near the lower Bollinger Band around $830, reflecting steady downside pressure. The coin has struggled to reclaim the mid-band near $880, and previous support around $900 has now turned into resistance. Momentum indicators remain weak: the relative strength index is below 50, MACD sits under its signal line, and the price is below major moving averages from the 10-day to the 200-day. A move back above $880 could ease selling pressure, while a drop below $820 would keep the downside risk active.
Despite the short-term weakness, BNB’s long-term fundamentals remain solid. Binance recently received full regulatory approval from Abu Dhabi Global Market, strengthening its institutional credibility. Adoption of BNB in real-world applications continues to rise, including support for BlackRock’s tokenized treasury fund. Its auto-burn mechanism also continues to reduce circulating supply, reinforcing BNB’s long-term value proposition.
Investor focus is also returning to leadership stability, with CEO Changpeng Zhao becoming more publicly engaged following the resolution of legal matters. Overall, while BNB faces near-term bearish pressure, longer-term fundamentals and institutional adoption provide a more positive backdrop.



