Here's something you probably didn't expect to read: Dogecoin (DOGE)—yes, the meme coin with the Shiba Inu mascot—might soon get the same regulatory treatment as Bitcoin (BTC). The Senate Banking Committee just released a draft bill that would classify DOGE as a commodity rather than a security, and the crypto markets are loving it.
Both Dogecoin and Shiba Inu (SHIB) jumped 5% on Tuesday after the news dropped. The reason? This legislation could fundamentally change how exchanges and asset managers deal with these tokens.
How a Technicality Could Change Everything
The draft bill contains a beautifully simple provision: because a Dogecoin ETF was already trading on a major exchange before January 1, DOGE automatically qualifies for "non-ancillary asset" status. That's regulatory speak for "this is a commodity, not a security."
Why does this matter? Because it means Dogecoin escapes the SEC securities rules and registration requirements that have been hanging over countless other crypto projects like a regulatory sword of Damocles.
For exchanges like Coinbase, this removes the securities law risk that's made listing certain tokens a legal minefield. For asset managers who've shelved Dogecoin ETF applications in their filing cabinets, it provides the legal clarity needed to dust them off and resubmit.
The Senate Banking Committee votes on Thursday. If this passes, the regulatory barrier that's been blocking more Dogecoin ETF products simply disappears.
Technical Picture: DOGE Tests Critical Levels
The rally pushed DOGE above its 20-day moving average at $0.13828 for the first time in months—a small victory after a brutal stretch. The meme coin has crashed 55% from September's $0.27 peak down to December's $0.1215 low. Tuesday's move suggests the bleeding might finally be stopping.
But let's not get ahead of ourselves. Dogecoin price remains trapped below three key resistance levels: the 50-day EMA at $0.14288, the 100-day EMA at $0.15911, and the 200-day EMA at $0.17894. All three need to be reclaimed before anyone can seriously talk about a real recovery.
What's interesting here is the blockchain data showing continued accumulation despite the selloff. Someone out there has been building positions at these depressed levels, which is either brave or foolish depending on how the next few weeks play out.
Right now, DOGE is testing mid-channel resistance around $0.143-$0.145. Breaking above this zone could trigger short covering that pushes toward $0.16. On the downside, support sits at $0.138. Losing that level targets $0.126, then $0.115-$0.12. If DOGE breaks $0.10, we're looking at complete capitulation territory.
Shiba Inu Forms Double-Bottom Pattern
Shiba Inu is having its own moment. After collapsing 62% from its August high, SHIB just formed what traders call a double-bottom—hitting the same low twice without breaking through. It's one of those chart patterns that looks great in textbooks but doesn't always work in practice.
If this pattern holds, it could trigger aggressive short covering. Sentiment got extremely negative during the selloff, which means there's potential energy stored up for a reversal. But the Supertrend indicator remains bearish at $0.00000754, and price is still trading below all meaningful resistance levels.
The key level to watch: $0.000014. Clearing that would signal the worst is over and could push SHIB toward $0.000016-$0.000018. Support is holding at $0.00000822 for now, but losing $0.0000075 would retest December's low at $0.00000676.
The broader question is whether Tuesday's 5% rally is the start of something real or just another head-fake in a brutal downtrend. The Senate vote on Thursday should give us a better answer.




