LAB Holds Elevated Ground After Multi-Day Run

$LAB is trading at $19.5, up 34.48% in the past 24 hours, with $210M in volume confirming sustained participation rather than a low-liquidity spike. This follows a previously reported 89% surge, which means the token has not fully retraced — a sign of structural demand rather than a one-candle event.

The continued volume profile is the key signal here. When altcoins maintain elevated volume across successive sessions, it typically indicates accumulation is ongoing rather than complete. Traders watching LAB will want to monitor whether $19.5 holds as support or acts as distribution.

NEAR Printing Relative Strength With Institutional-Grade Volume

$NEAR closed the Asian session at $2.68, up 14.54% on $1.08B in 24-hour volume. That volume figure places it among the higher-activity large-caps during the overnight window — a threshold that tends to attract derivatives desks and cross-market arbitrageurs.

Relative to $BTC's comparatively muted overnight action, NEAR's move represents meaningful outperformance. The $2.68 level is a technically significant zone; NEAR has historically struggled to sustain above the $2.50–$2.70 band. A close and hold above this range on the daily would shift the medium-term structure meaningfully.

For context, NEAR's ecosystem has seen growing developer activity and a push into AI-adjacent infrastructure — factors that have given the narrative legs beyond pure price momentum. The volume corroborates that this isn't purely speculative flow.

M Token: Lower Liquidity, but Persistent Bid

$M is trading at $3.3, up 9.31% on $13M in volume. The volume is thin relative to LAB and NEAR, which introduces caution around reading too deeply into the percentage move alone — low-liquidity assets can produce outsized percentage swings on relatively modest order flow.

That said, $M has now appeared in back-to-back overnight sessions with positive price action, following a 7.5% move flagged in prior coverage. Consecutive sessions of upside without a full retracement can indicate a controlled accumulation pattern, though confirmation requires a volume expansion to validate the move.