Here’s why OP token price is falling despite Optimism buyback approval
Optimism (OP) underperformed as risk-off sentiment hit high-beta altcoins hardest.
The buyback plan is delayed, small, and lacks immediate supply reduction.
Technical breakdown below key averages has triggered strong sell-side momentum.
The Optimism (OP) token is falling even after token holders approved a long-awaited buyback plan.
At first glance, this seems counterintuitive, since buybacks are often seen as bullish for token prices.
However, the market reaction highlights the gap between long-term fundamentals and short-term trading reality.
OP is currently trading around $0.27, down roughly 8.8% in the past 24 hours.
This decline is sharper than the broader crypto market’s 5.26% drop over the same period.
The underperformance signals that OP is facing pressures beyond simple market noise.
Market-wide risk aversion is dragging down high-beta tokens
The crypto market is currently in a clear risk-off phase.
Investors are rotating away from speculative assets and toward traditional safe havens.
Gold has surged to record highs, reflecting heightened global uncertainty.
At the same time, Bitcoin has slid to around $85,000.
When Bitcoin weakens during risk-off periods, altcoins typically fall harder.
OP is considered a high-beta asset, meaning it magnifies broader market moves.
As a result, even modest market stress translates into outsized losses for OP.
The Fear and Greed Index sits at 38, firmly in “Fear” territory.
This indicates traders are prioritising capital preservation over growth opportunities.
In such conditions, narratives like governance wins and future buybacks struggle to gain traction.
Instead, liquidity dries up and sellers dominate price action.
This macro backdrop sets the stage for OP’s underperformance.
The buyback approval didn’t meet short-term market expectations
While Optimism token holders have approved a proposal to allocate 50% of Superchain sequencer revenue to OP buybacks, the market has reacted negatively rather than positively, and the main reason is timing.
The buybacks are scheduled to begin in February, not immediately. For short-term traders, delayed execution reduces the perceived impact.
The scale of the program also disappointed investors. Annual buybacks are estimated at around $8 million.
That figure represents roughly 1.5% of OP’s current market capitalisation.
Such a modest allocation is unlikely to offset sustained selling pressure. Additionally, the plan does not include token burns.
Repurchased tokens are sent to the treasury, leaving future supply decisions uncertain.
At the same time, token unlocks continue to add supply to the market. This imbalance weakens the buyback narrative in the near term.
Rather than acting as a price floor, the announcement became a “sell the news” event.
Conclusion: long-term promise, short-term pressure
OP’s price decline reflects a convergence of macro, narrative, and technical factors.
Market-wide risk aversion has reduced demand for speculative altcoins.
The buyback plan, while structurally positive, lacks immediate impact.
The token recently broke below its 7-day and 30-day simple moving averages, triggering algorithmic and momentum-based selling.

The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) indicator has also turned negative, pointing to accelerating downside momentum.
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) remains near 44, suggesting OP is not yet oversold, meaning there is little technical support from bargain hunters.
Together, these forces explain why OP is falling despite positive governance news.
Long-term, tying token value to Superchain revenue remains a meaningful shift.
Short-term, however, traders are focused on survival rather than future alignment.
The next major test, according to analysts, will be whether OP can hold the $0.2528 support level.
Upcoming macro data, particularly US inflation metrics, may determine the next move.
But until the market sentiment improves, OP is likely to remain under pressure despite its improving fundamentals.





