A widely watched on-chain profile for Dogecoin is flagging a striking absence of realized cost basis between roughly $0.19 and $0.07—an “air pocket” that could amplify volatility if price migrates into the range. Posting a Glassnode UTXO Realized Price Distribution (URPD): ATH-Partitioned chart, analyst NekoZ (@NekozTek) wrote: “There’s a huge gap on DOGE between $0.19 and $0.07.”
URPD maps coins by their last on-chain transfer price, a proxy for where current holders acquired their coins. Dense clusters typically align with strong support or resistance; sparsely populated bands imply fewer cost-anchored holders who might otherwise slow a move.
Higher up, another notable node appears around $0.1996, carrying 14,183,292,412.578 DOGE, or 9.37%. The expanse shaded between these anchors is marked “GAP,” visually underscoring the thin realized supply across that corridor.
The logic is symmetrical on the way up: if price advances from the lower shelf into a sparsely held zone, there is less overhead supply to impede a rally until it nears the next dense pocket. URPD therefore speaks to path-dependence and market microstructure rather than direction in isolation.
What it does show, with unusual clarity in Dogecoin’s case, is a bifurcated cost landscape: a heavy base near ~$0.07 and a sizable cluster near ~$0.20, with relatively little realized ownership in between. Should price traverse that interval, the chart implies a higher likelihood of fast travel within the gap and stickier behavior when it reconnects with one of the dense shelves.
At press time, DOGE traded at $0.198.