Archive

January 7, 2026

Browsing

The post Chainlink Eyes Move Toward $20 After SEC Approval Signals Bullish Trend: What’s Next for LINK Price? appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Chainlink has started this year on a bullish note as the SEC finally approved the Bitwise Chainlink ETF, allowing it to enter US equity markets. As a result, whales have been consistently withdrawing LINK from exchanges over the last few days, hinting at a quiet accumulation ahead of a breakout. Additionally, several on-chain metrics have turned positive, which might trigger a 50% surge on the LINK price chart.

Chainlink has seen heavy accumulation by large investors in recent days. Big holders pulled about 4.5 million LINK tokens, worth around $62 million, from exchanges this week.

This buying trend looks similar to late 2025, just before LINK jumped 20% in December. Exchange balances are now at multi-year lows, which could limit supply and push prices higher. Additionally, data from CryptoQuant shows this is one of the largest recent accumulations, suggesting smart investors may be preparing for a price rise.

Also read: Chainlink Price Prediction 2026, 2027 – 2030: Will LINK Price Reach $100?

The reason behind the strong accumulation is the strong ETF inflows and recent approval of Bitwise LINK ETF. Grayscale’s new LINK ETF has brought in about 42 million since launching in December. Hence, the SEC’s approval of spot LINK ETFs from Bitwise and Grayscale is a big step forward, even though trading activity is still much lower than Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs. 

LINK OI

Data from Coinglass shows a sharp increase in Chainlink’s open interest in recent days. LINK’s OI jumped from the low of $510 million to a recent high above $700 million. This suggests that trading activity is increasing with a rise in volatility, which might help LINK breaking above immediate resistance levels.  

Additionally, Chainlink has crossed a major milestone, with total fees surpassing 6.9 million. This shows strong real usage across apps and enterprise projects. This means that more smart contracts rely on Chainlink’s data services, making it a key part of Web3. Rising fees highlight growing demand, preparing LINK price for a significant rally ahead.

Chainlink is trading near its short-term moving averages, suggesting the downtrend is losing strength. As of writing, LINK price trades at $13.3, declining over 5% in the last 24 hours.

LINK/USDT Chart

Though Chainlink is declining in recent hours, it is holding above the 20-day EMA around $13.28, while the 50-day and 100-day EMAs remain overhead, acting as resistance near the $13.6–$13.8 zone.

The RSI has declined sharply and is currently hovering below the midline at level 46, showing bearish momentum with strong pressure from sellers. A sustained move above the descending resistance line could open the door for a push toward higher levels. On the upside, LINK price might head toward $20 before facing any significant selling pressure.

However, if LINK slips below the 20-day EMA, the price may retest lower support areas near $13. Overall, the trend is bullish and slightly improving as buyers accumulate around the dip.

Nvidia stock (NASDAQ: NVDA) jumped nearly 2% on Wednesday, following reports that Chinese tech companies have placed orders for more than 2 million of its H200 chips.

NDVA extended gains as traders reassessed the profit opportunity from China’s reopened market.

The move reflects growing confidence that the licensing approvals, already underway at the Treasury Department, could unlock substantial near-term revenue.​

The $40 billion estimate is straightforward math: 2 million H200 units priced at $27,000 each, minus the 25% export surcharge that Nvidia must pay to the US Treasury.

It’s crucial to note, however, that orders do not equal shipped revenue. China must formally approve the imports, US licenses must clear final processing, and production capacity at Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company must ramp as planned.

Nvidia has already contracted with TSMC to boost H200 manufacturing in the second quarter, with a target to deliver additional units before the Lunar New Year in mid-February.​

Nvidia stock: What $40 billion number actually means

The headline math is compelling, but investors should understand what’s conditional here.

Reuters reporting reveals that Chinese firms, including ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent, have already signaled intent to purchase 2 million units.

But actual sales depend on three factors: first, final US export license approval (still in process); second, Beijing’s green light for imports (not yet formally granted); and third, TSMC’s ability to ramp 4nm production within months.​

CEO Jensen Huang deliberately tempered expectations at CES 2026 this week, stating he expects no formal announcement from either government and that purchase orders will be the only reliable signal of success.

“The customer demand is high. It’s quite high. It’s very high,” Huang said, yet he noted that Nvidia is “not expecting any press releases or large declarations.”

This caution reflects the political sensitivity as Washington controls the licenses, and Beijing has leverage over Chinese customer behavior.

History also matters here as Nvidia’s H20 chip won export approval last summer but was quietly discouraged by Beijing, leaving inventory stranded.

That experience explains why the market is hedging its bets even as it prices in optimism.​

Can orders, approvals and production make gains stick?

Nvidia’s supply chain has been “activated,” Huang confirmed, with H200s already flowing through production pipelines.

The real bottleneck now sits with regulators on both sides of the Pacific.

US Treasury approval is in the final stages, and Treasury sources tell Reuters the government is “working feverishly” to finalise licenses.

Yet the timing is fluid as Nvidia has flagged a potential mid-February start, but that assumes approvals land on schedule.

The analyst community has largely ignored this catalyst in their models.

Wall Street’s consensus estimates for fiscal 2027 revenue stand at $320 billion, nearly double current-year expectations, but few forecasters have folded in the $40 billion China scenario.

If the company does unlock full H200 demand, top-line growth could jump to 69%, to roughly $360 billion, according to Motley Fool analysis.

At Nvidia’s current 21x forward price-to-sales multiple, that math alone could support significantly higher valuations.

The post Nvidia stock soars nearly 2% today: is this $40B catalyst sending NVDA higher? appeared first on Invezz