Cardano (ADA) Price Risks 35 Percent Drop Amid 55 Percent ETF Odds and Massive Airdrop

By Tatevik Avetisyan 6 Min Read

As of May 16, 2025, Cardano (ADA) appears to have formed a bearish flag pattern on its daily chart. A bearish flag pattern is a continuation setup that typically forms after a sharp downward move, followed by a brief upward or sideways consolidation inside parallel trendlines before breaking down further.

Cardano ADA Bearish Flag Breakdown Chart. Source: TradingView
Cardano ADA Bearish Flag Breakdown Chart. Source: TradingView

This structure began forming in early April 2025, following a bottom near $0.58. ADA then entered an upward-sloping consolidation channel bounded by two parallel red trendlines. However, recent candles show rejection at the upper boundary near $0.82 and a pullback toward the midrange.

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If the bearish flag confirms with a breakdown below the lower trendline—currently intersecting near the $0.72 mark—ADA may continue its downtrend. The measured target for the breakdown implies a 35% drop from the breakdown point, which sets a potential price target near $0.51. This target aligns with a previous support level and is marked on the chart with a downward arrow.

Meanwhile, the 50-day exponential moving average (EMA), currently at $0.7203, acts as an immediate support. A close below this line would further validate bearish continuation.

At the same time, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) sits at 57.61, just below its 14-day average of 59.35. This neutral-to-bearish positioning shows fading bullish momentum without yet reaching oversold territory.

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If ADA closes below the flag’s lower trendline and fails to reclaim the 50-day EMA quickly, the bearish flag breakdown will likely play out. A fall toward the $0.51 target zone could follow in that case, especially if selling volume increases.

Cardano ETF Approval Odds Hit 55%, Network Activity Surges

Meanwhile, traders on Polymarket now place a 55% likelihood on Cardano (ADA) receiving spot exchange-traded fund (ETF) approval by the end of 2025. This marks a 45% increase from earlier in the year, reflecting growing optimism across the cryptocurrency sector. The rise in confidence follows the successful approvals of spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs in the United States.

Cardano ETF Approval Odds Reach 55 Percent. Source: Polymarket
Cardano ETF Approval Odds Reach 55 Percent. Source: Polymarket

This shift has sparked renewed interest in Cardano’s on-chain performance. Between April 30 and May 6, Cardanoscan data shows daily transactions ranged from 30,000 to 35,000. Activity rose sharply beginning May 7, repeatedly topping 40,000 and reaching nearly 50,000 on May 15. These levels suggest steady engagement with Cardano beyond market speculation.

Cardano Transaction Volume Surges to 50K in May. Source: Cardanoscan
Cardano Transaction Volume Surges to 50K in May. Source: Cardanoscan

Analysts attribute this positive sentiment to multiple factors. Cardano’s proof-of-stake blockchain, ongoing ecosystem development, and energy-efficient structure continue to appeal to institutional investors. The ETF speculation has not only driven price discussion but also underlined Cardano’s operational stability.

Although the optimism on Polymarket has held firm since January, final decisions remain in the hands of regulators who are weighing market maturity, compliance frameworks, and investor protection concerns.

For now, the combined increase in ETF odds and transaction volumes signals strengthened belief in Cardano’s broader role in institutional crypto adoption.

Hoskinson Rejects VCs, Launches Midnight Airdrop for 37 Million Wallets

At the same time,  Cardano co-founder Charles Hoskinson unveiled a new cross-chain airdrop during his keynote at Consensus 2025 in Toronto, targeting 37 million wallets across eight major blockchains. The initiative, named the Glacier Drop, will distribute two tokens — NIGHT, a governance token, and DUST, designed for private transactions. Hoskinson confirmed that the entire distribution will go to retail users, excluding venture capitalists and early insiders.

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“I had no f-ing time for your Ponzi,”

he said, dismissing VC offers and reinforcing his decision to create a community-first launch model.

Hoskinson described the current state of crypto as fractured by what he called “tribal warfare,” where projects compete rather than collaborate. He criticized the recurring cycle of token launches that foster division instead of unity. To counter this, he built Midnight — a privacy-first sidechain of Cardano — to support cooperative economics. Midnight remains in testnet, with a mainnet launch expected later in 2025.

The project allows developers from Ethereum, Solana, and Bitcoin to build decentralized applications (dApps) using Midnight while still paying fees in their respective native tokens like ETH, SOL, and BTC. Validators from different chains can also help secure the Midnight network and share rewards, creating an incentive to collaborate across ecosystems.

Hoskinson emphasized that the Glacier Drop hands full control to recipients. Users can trade, hold, or ignore their tokens without lockups or restrictions.

“You already have it, congratulations. It’s yours. It’s your property,”

he told the audience. He said the goal is to redefine how crypto distributes value — shifting away from closed insider deals toward broader, more inclusive access.

Calling it the most enjoyable project he’s worked on, Hoskinson framed Midnight and its unorthodox token strategy as a blueprint for the industry’s future. He believes as traditional tech giants and billions of users enter the crypto space, principles like privacy, fairness, and cooperation will be critical to long-term success.