1. Home
  2. ETH/USD

ETH/USD

Ethereum whale population drops after Shapella — Will ETH price sink too?

Ethereum's supply across whale addresses has dropped consistently since March 2020, offset by greater retail interest.

The share of Ethereum (ETH) held by so-called whale addresses has dropped since Ethereum's Shapella upgrade in mid April, suggesting that large investors may be leaning bearish in t near term.

ETH whale population shrinks post-Shapella

The amount of Ether held by addresses with 1,000-10,000 ETH, or "whales," was over 14.033 million ETH on May 1, according to Glassnode data. In comparison, the count was 14.167 million ETH on April 12, when Shapella went live on Ethereum.

Ethereum whale net position change. Source: Glassnode

Interestingly, a week before the Shapella upgrade, the Ethereum whale cohort held 14.303 million ETH, the highest amount in 2023

"Shrimps" only ones buying ETH since Shapella

Ether's price is down over 3.5% since the Shapella upgrade— suggesting that several whales may have indeed "sold the news."

Interestingly, other address cohorts also showed a decline, including sharks (100-1,000 ETH), fishes (10-100 ETH), crabs (1-10 ETH), and even mega-whales (10,000+ ETH).

Only shrimps (<1 ETH) accumulated during the period, with their net position slightly increasing from 1.79 million ETH on April 12 to 1.80 million ETH on May 1.

Ethereum shrimp net position change. Source: TradingView

Shapella enabled investors to withdraw the ETH locked via staking, which some argued would increase selling pressure.

Since the Shapella upgrade, investors have withdrawn over 1.97 million ETH worth around $3.6 billion, according to Beaconcha.in. Nevertheless, no major changes in cryptocurrency exchanges' ETH balances have been seen to date. 

Ethereum whales vs. shrimps

Historically, less Ethereum whales typically means heightened downside risk for ETH price.

Whale activity typically acts as a leading market indicator. So, rich investors accumulating typically precedes a price rise, and vice versa. 

The price-whale positive correlation existed until March 2020, as shown in the chart below. Afterward, retail mania took over alongside the Federal Reserve's quantitative easing and the correlation snapped.

Ethereum whale net position change. Source: Glassnode

Notably, ETH price rallied from $110 in March 2020 to over $4,950 in November 2021 despite the declining whales. The inverse correlation continued throughout the price downtrend to around $850 in June 2022.

But since then, whale holdings have risen by nearly 1 million ETH. Meanwhile, ETH's price has more than doubled to around $1,850, hinting at a possible return of the price-whale correlation, which would be a bullish sign for Ethereum. 

Where can ETH price go next?

The $2,000-level is an important psychological resistance level for ETH/USD that bulls have been unable to break upon multiple attempts in 2023.

Related: Ethereum price outlook weakens, but ETH derivatives suggest $1.6K is unlikely

On the daily chart, ETH/USD holds above the short-term support provided by its 50-day exponential moving average (50-day EMA; the red wave), near $1,840. A successful rebound from here opens $2,000-$2,125 as the next upside target range in Q2.

ETH/USD daily price chart. Source: TradingView

Conversely, a break below the 50-day EMA risks sending ETH toward its 200-day EMA (the blue wave) near $1,670, down about 10% from current price levels.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Filing suggests SEC is exploring grounds to deny spot Ether ETFs

Ethereum price lower highs vs. Bitcoin hint at more downside in April

Institutional investors accumulated Ether and sold off Bitcoin last week, suggesting confidence in Ethereum after the Shapella hard fork.

The price of Ethereum's Ether (ETH) token has retreated from its recovery trend versus Bitcoin (BTC) while making a series of lower highs in April.

ETH price risks more losses vs. Bitcoin

As of April 24, the ETH/BTC pair was down about 5.5% from its local high of 0.0709 BTC six days ago. The same period witnessed Ether declining nearly 15% and Bitcoin dropping 11.25% in U.S. dollar terms.

ETH/BTC daily price chart. Source: TradingView

For now, ETH holds above its 50-day exponential moving average (50-day EMA; the red wave) near 0.0672 BTC. But if the March 2023 fractal is any indication, Ethereum's price could drop sharply below the support wave.

The ETH/BTC pair saw a pullback trend in March after testing the 200-day EMA (the blue wave), breaking below its 50-day EMA in the process.

If the fractal plays out similarly in April, the downside target is 0.0627 BTC by the month's end, about 7% lower than the current levels, and a level that served as major support in March and April.

This target also coincides with Ether's long-term ascending trendline support — the "buy zone" in the chart below — that has been capping its bearish attempts since June 2022.

ETH/BTC three-day price chart. Source: TradingView

Weekly Ethereum institutional flows beat BTC

Interestingly, Ethereum's underperformance versus Bitcoin was counter to institutional flows for the past week. 

Ethereum funds attracted $17 million to their coffers in the week ending April 21 versus Bitcoin's $53.1 million outflow, according to CoinShares' latest report.

Fund flow into crypto funds. Source: CoinShares

"These inflows suggest there is increasing confidence amongst investors following the successful implementation of the Shapella upgrade," James Butterfill, head of research at CoinShares, noted, adding that they "were solely from Europe."

Related: Ethereum up 20% in April while Markets Pro sees 379% gain in one day

As for Bitcoin, the outflow began around April 14 when the coin reached $30,000, a psychological resistance level. Butterfill said the BTC's drop to below $27,500 resulted from profit-taking in the absence of macroeconomic triggers.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Filing suggests SEC is exploring grounds to deny spot Ether ETFs

Ethereum is up 15% versus Bitcoin since Shapella — More ETH price gains ahead?

Ether stakers have withdrawn $1.21 billion worth of ETH from Ethereum staking contracts since the Shapella upgrade.

Ethereum's Ether (ETH) token has entered a sharp price recovery a week after hitting a six-month low versus Bitcoin (BTC). 

On April 18, the widely-tracked ETH/BTC pair reached 0.0709 BTC, up about 15% from its local bottom of 0.0602 BTC six days ago. Now, the pair eyes a run-up toward 0.075 BTC by June, based on the fractal setup previously discussed here.

ETH/BTC daily price chart. Source: TradingView

Ethereum's Shapella FOMO

Interestingly, Ether's local bottom formation versus Bitcoin occurred on the day of Ethereum's long-awaited Shapella upgrade.

The hard fork enables Ether stakers to withdraw their rewards — around 1.1 billion ETH — from Ethereum's proof-of-stake smart contract. This update may have boosted ETH's appeal compared to BTC, beating anticipations that a freshly unlocked Ether supply would increase sell-pressure.

Stakers have withdrawn 574,700 ETH — worth about $1.21 billion — since the Shapella upgrade on April 12, according to data fetched by Nansen. Interestingly, Ether's price in U.S. dollar terms has increased by 14.25% in the same period.

ETH deposits vs. withdrawals. Source: Nansen

It means that many stakers have decided to hold onto their Ether rewards. On the other hand, Bitcoin has failed to log a decisive breakout above its technical resistance of $30,000, possibly making ETH a more attractive short-term bet for traders.

Weak institutional inflows versus Bitcoin

Institutional investors have shown more interest in Bitcoin than Ether in the past week, according to CoinShares' weekly report.

For instance, Bitcoin-based investment vehicles witnessed $103.8 million in inflows in the week ending April 14. In comparison, Ethereum funds attracted $300,000 only, showing that mainstream investors may have followed the "sell the news" strategy after the Shapella upgrade.

Net flows into crypto funds. Source: CoinShares

Ethereum price meanwhile is also at risk of a possible bearish reversal move due to its overbought daily relative strength index (RSI).

Related: Shapella could bring institutional investors to Ethereum despite risks

If ETH price retreats from its current resistance level of around $2,140, its immediate downside target appears at around $1,984, which acted as resistance in May 2022 and August 2022.

ETH/USD daily price chart. Source: TradingView

An extended selloff could push Ether price down to its 50-day exponential moving average (50-day EMA; the red wave) near $1,800, down about 15% than its current price levels.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Filing suggests SEC is exploring grounds to deny spot Ether ETFs

Can Ethereum crack $2K? ETH price inches closer despite new unlocked supply

Ethereum staking withdrawals are picking momentum. But they have not been able to cause a major selloff as many had anticipated post the Shanghai upgrade.

The price of Ethereum's Ether (ETH) token came just a few dollars from hitting $2,000 a day after the launch of the network's long-anticipated Shanghai upgrade.

Ethereum ducks sell-the-news fears

On April 13, Ether's price gained roughly 4% to reach an intraday high of $1,996 on Coinbase, ignoring the potential selloff pressure the Shanghai upgrade could potentially bring to the market.

ETH/USD daily price chart. Source: TradingView

To recap: the Shanghai hard fork, also known as "Shapella," enables users to withdraw their ETH from Ethereum's proof-of-stake smart contract.

As of 09:00 UTC, April 13, over 98,000 ETH worth around $194.8 million has left Ethereum's voting balance reserves since the Shanghai launch a day ago, according to Nansen. In other words, nearly $200 million in potential selling pressure has entered the market.

ETH deposits vs. withdrawals. Source: Nansen

But Ether's price rise since the Shanghai launch suggests that the market had no problem absorbing any selling pressure arising from this event so far. It's also possible that most users have decided to hold onto their ETH staking rewards rather than sell them in anticipation of further gains.

About 15% of Ethereum's total supply in circulation, nearly 120.4 million ETH, is currently staked.

Interestingly, more than 70% of the ETH staked is still underwater compared to current price levels, according to data gathered by Dune Analytics. This reduces the possibility of a sell-off in the near term from Shanghai's staking withdrawals.

Ethereum price risks 10% correction

The ongoing run-up in the Ethereum market has left ETH/USD slightly overbought, raising the likelihood of a short-term price correction this month.

Related: When levees break, liquidity flows — Analyzing Ethereum Shapella and liquidity staking derivatives

Notably, ETH's daily relative strength index (RSI) is merely two points below its overbought threshold of 70. In addition, ETH/USD tests a critical resistance level near $1,990, which in May 2022 and August 2022 preceded price pullbacks. 

ETH/USD daily price chart. Source: TradingView

A repeat of this scenario likely means a correction toward its 50-day exponential moving average (50-day EMA; the red wave) near $1,750 in April, down about 10% than the current price levels. This ETH price level is also close to the historical support/resistance line.

Conversely, a decisive breakout above $2,000 — a psychological resistance level — could have Ether price start its potential climb toward $3,000.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Filing suggests SEC is exploring grounds to deny spot Ether ETFs

Ethereum price retests key support level that preceded 60% gains in June 2022

Ethereum funds have witnessed inflows worth only $600,000 in the week ending April 7 compared to Bitcoin's $56 million.

Ethereum's Ether (ETH) token continued its losing streak versus Bitcoin (BTC) for the fifth day in a row as BTC's price jumped above $30,000 for the first time since June 2022.

ETH/BTC bullish reversal fails midway

On April 11, the ETH/BTC pair dropped nearly 1.6% to 0.0634 BTC to retest multi-month lows.

ETH/BTC daily price chart. Source: TradingView

ETH/BTC level is down 6.75% from its local peak of 0.0679 BTC set six days ago. It is also just 2% above the pair's local low of 0.0622 BTC from March 20, showing that Ether's bullish reversal attempt versus Bitcoin is near failure.

Interestingly, institutional interest also appears more gravitated toward Bitcoin than Ethereum, according to CoinShares' weekly report. It shows that the Bitcoin-focused investment funds witnessed inflows worth $56 million in the week ending April 7.

Net flows into crypto funds in the week ending April 7. Source: CoinShares

In comparison, the Ethereum-based funds received only $600,000 despite the hype around its long-awaited Shanghai hard fork on April 12.

Another ETH price rebound attempt ahead?

ETH/BTC's ongoing decline has prompted it to retest its multi-month ascending trendline support (buy zone) near 0.0635 BTC for a potential price rebound toward its descending trendline resistance (sell zone) near 0.0750 BTC. 

In other words, a 16.5% price rally by June, as covered in previous analysis.

ETH/BTC three-day price chart. Source: TradingView

The bullish reversal outlook takes cues from ETH/BTC's price rebound in July 2022 after testing the same ascending trendline as support. Notably, the pair rose by about 60% to reach the descending trendline resistance near 0.0856 BTC.

Related: 3 reasons why Ethereum price can reach $3K in Q2

Conversely, a decisive break below the ascending trendline support would raise ETH/BTC's possibility to eye its 200-week exponential moving average (200-week EMA; the blue wave) near 0.0563 BTC, down about 10% from current price levels.

ETH/BTC weekly price chart. Source: TradingView

Like the ascending trendline support, the 200-week EMA was instrumental in stopping Ether's price decline versus Bitcoin in July 2022. This makes it the most probable downside target in the coming months.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Filing suggests SEC is exploring grounds to deny spot Ether ETFs

Ethereum’s deflation accelerates as Shanghai upgrade looms — Can ETH price avoid a 30% drop?

A deflationary Ethereum supply does not necessarily mean a bullish market for ETH, at least in the near term.

The price of Ethereum's native token, Ether (ETH), has surged by more than 40% year-to-date to around $1,750, the highest level in seven months. However, ETH price is not out of the woods yet despite several bullish cues such as the Shanghai upgrade in the pipeline. 

Ethereum price bull trap?

Ether's rise has appeared primarily in the wake of similar upside moves elsewhere in the crypto market, responding to lowering inflation that reduces the Federal Reserve's likelihood of raising interest rates aggressively.

At the same time, warnings about an imminent bull trap in the risky markets have emerged, which may wipe out their recent profits. Ethereu, due to its long-term correlation with stocks and Bitcoin, faces similar risks.

Let's take a closer look at  several potential bullish and bearish catalysts for the price of Ethereum below.

ETH becomes most deflationary since Merge

The issuance rate of Ether has dropped to its lowest level since the network's transition to Proof-of-Stake (PoS) via "the Merge" in September. 

On Feb. 20, Ether's annual supply since the Merge shrunk to -0.056%. In other words, the Ethereum network had been minting fewer ETH tokens than were removed from the supply in the past five months.

Ether supply since Merge. Source: Ultrasound Money

Investors typically perceive a cryptocurrency with a fixed supply or deflationary issuance rate as bullish in the longer term. 

Ethereum's supply is currently around 120.50 million, but there is technically no max supply. The London hard fork in August 2021, however, introduced a fee-burning mechanism that added deflationary properties to Ether's tokenomics.

As a result of this upgrade, the higher the Ethereum network's transaction fees at any given time, the more Ether will be "burned" or removed from the supply forever.

Interestingly, Ethereum's median gas price has rebounded to a seven-month high of 27.13 Gwei (the smallest ETH unit) in the week ending Feb. 17.

Ethereum 7-day median transaction gas price. Source: Glassnode 

Shanghai hard fork

ETH demand must not drop against a deflationary supply rate for the price to climb. One potential bullish catalyst in the pipeline for Ethereum is its upcoming network upgrade dubbed Shanghai, slated for mid-March.

The Shanghai hard fork enables users who have locked their Ether into Ethereum's PoS smart contract to withdraw their assets finally. This increased liquidity could encourage more people to hold and stake Ether tokens, according to Kennan Mell, an independent market analyst.

In his SeekingAlpha note, Mell argues:

"It's possible that the successful implementation of staking withdrawals will boost Ethereum's price as new investors decide to buy in right afterward, either because they were waiting to buy until the network successfully went through a risky hard fork to implement withdrawals or because they are lured by a more liquid staking yield."

Meanwhile, the total value locked in the Ethereum PoS contract continues to rise to new record highs, with the latest data showing deposits worth nearly 16.63 million ETH.

Ethereum 2.0 total value staked. Source: Glassnode

Crypto staking crackdown

The above-mentioned potential bullish catalysts for ETH price, however, could be offset by regulatory crackdowns and unfavorable technicals in the near term. 

In February, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) fined Kraken, a popular crypto exchange, $30 million for not registering its staking-as-a-service program, which includes the option of Ethereum staking.

Related: Ethereum's Shanghai fork is coming, but it doesn't mean investors should dump ETH

Coinbase exchange CEO Brian Armstrong also warned that the SEC might ban crypto staking services for retail investors altogether. If true, such a prohibition could hurt Ether's demand among U.S. investors.

ETH price hits bearish inflection level

From a technical perspective, Ether price is currently testing a key resistance confluence for a potential pullback.

Notably, the confluence comprises a multi-month descending trendline resistance and a 50-week exponential moving average (50-week EMA; the red wave), as shown below.

ETH/USD weekly price chart. Source: TradingView

A pullback from the confluence could have ETH's price test the 200-week EMA (the blue wave) near $1,550 as its short-term downside target.

Furthermore, an extended correction could push the price toward the black ascending trendline support near $1,200 by March 2023, down about 30% from the current levels.

Conversely, a decisive breakout above the descending trendline resistance could activate a bullish reversal setup toward the $2,000-$2,500 area. 

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Filing suggests SEC is exploring grounds to deny spot Ether ETFs

Ethereum price technicals hint at 35% gains versus Bitcoin in 2023

Ethereum market dominance has doubled since the lunch of its staking contract in December 2020 as ETH price eyes levels not seen in five years versus Bitcoin.

Ethereum’s native token, Ether (ETH), could grow by 35% versus Bitcoin (BTC) this year to hit 0.1 BTC for the first time since 2018 as it forms a classic bullish continuation pattern.

Ethereum price must first break key resistance

Dubbed an ascending triangle, the pattern forms when the price fluctuates inside a range defined by rising trendline support and horizontal trendline resistance. It typically resolves after the price breaks out in the direction of its previous trend.

On a weekly chart, the ETH/BTC pair has been painting an ascending pattern since May 2021. The Ethereum token eyes a breakout above the pattern's horizontal trendline resistance near 0.0776 BTC. Breaking this level could then see the price rally by as much as the triangle's maximum height. 

In other words, the ETH/BTC pair could reach the next big resistance level at 0.1 BTC in 2023, or 35% from the current price levels.

ETH/BTC weekly price chart. Source: TradingView

Nonetheless, it is important to mention that ETH/BTC has attempted to break above the triangle's resistance trendline eight times since May 2021. The attempts included two major  breakouts in November 2021 and September 2022, which saw the pair rallying 14% and 9%, respectively.

Both rallies fizzled out inside the 0.082 to 0.085 BTC area, followed by extreme price corrections that took ETH/BTC back inside the triangle range. Given this multi-year hurdle, the pair could face stiff resistance inside the 0.082 to 0.085 BTC range, even if it breaks above the triangle. 

Such a move would risk crashing ETH toward the triangle support, which coincides with its 50-week exponential moving average (50-week EMA), represented by the red line in the chart above, near 0.070 BTC, down nearly 6% from the current price levels. 

ETH "deflation" narrative

Ether’s bullish setup versus Bitcoin appears as ETH dominance has doubled versus other crypto assets in the past few years. 

Notably, ETH’s market capitalization has risen to nearly 20.5% of the entire crypto market valuation in January 2023, from about 10% in December 2020, when the Ethereum network started its transition from proof-of-work (PoW) to proof-of-stake (PoS) with the launch of a dedicated staking smart contract.

ETH.D weekly performance chart. Source: TradingView

Becoming a PoS blockchain has brought two key changes to Ethereum’s economy. First, users temporarily lock away a portion of their Ether holdings into Ethereum’s PoS smart contract to earn yield. And second, the Ethereum network has started burning some transaction fees.

Related: Ethereum ‘shark’ accumulation, Shanghai hard fork put $2K ETH price in play

Both changes have had a deflationary impact on overall supply. As a result, the Ethereum network now regularly produces fewer Ether tokens than are taken out of circulation, which theoretically makes ETH a “deflationary” asset.

ETH supply change since the Ethereum PoS upgrade in September 2022. Source: UltraSound.Money

The ETH/BTC price has grown nearly 250% since December 2020 despite still being down roughly 50% from its all-time highs witnessed in 2017. 

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Filing suggests SEC is exploring grounds to deny spot Ether ETFs

Ethereum ‘shark’ accumulation, Shanghai hard fork put $2K ETH price in play

Ethereum on-chain data reveals a considerable rise in the number of Ether shark addresses with weeks before its hard fork in March.

Ether (ETH) price technicals suggest that 35% gains are in play by March 2022 due to several bullish technical and fundamental factors.

Ethereum price rises above two key moving averages

On Jan. 8, Ether's price crossed above its 21-week exponential moving average (21-week EMA; the purple wave) and 200-day simple moving average (200-day SMA; the orange wave).

Historically, these two moving averages have separated bull and bear markets. When ETH price trades above them, it is considered to be in a bull market, and vice versa.

ETH/USD daily price chart feat. 21-week EMA and 200-day SMA. Source: TradingView

The last time when Ether crossed above its 21-week EMA and 200-day SMA was in April 2022. But this was a fakeout, in part due to the collapse of Terra (LUNA) the following month.

But while Ether's MA crossover does not guarantee further gains, the upside potential becomes greater if one looks at it in conjugation with other bullish factors, described below.

Ethereum's Shanghai hard fork, shark accumulation

Ether's price has risen by up to 20% in the first two weeks of January 2023, driven upward by an easing macro outlook and growing anticipation of Ethereum's upcoming Shanghai upgrade.

The upgrade is expected to go live in March, and will enable withdrawals of staked ETH. 

Related: 5 signs that an altcoin bull run could be underway

Several experts, including Messari research analyst Kunal Goel and IntoTheBlock head of research Lucas Outumuro, believe the Shanghai upgrade will make staking Ether more attractive despite the sell-off risks of unlocking a large chunk of Ether's supply.

Meanwhile, a rise in Ethereum's richest addresses is already underway by entities called "sharks" that hold anywhere between 100 and 10,000 ETH. The number of sharks has grown by 3,000 since November 2022, according to data from Santiment.

Ethereum shark addresses. Source: Santiment

This suggests strong accumulation of ETH, which may be a key reason behind ETH's current rebound so far in 2023.

ETH price eyes breakout above key trendlin

From a technical perspective, Ether is eyeing a breakout above a resistance confluence, namely the 50-3D EMA (the red wave) near $1,395, and a descending trendline that comes as a part of a prevailing symmetrical triangle.

ETH/USD three-day price chart. Source: TradingView

In other words, a decisive close above the confluence could have ETH pursue a run-up toward its next upside target at its 200-3D EMA (the blue wave) near $1,880, up around 35% compared to current price levels.

Interestingly, the $1,880 level was instrumental as resistance in May 2022 and August 2022.

Conversely, a pullback from the confluence would increase Ether's possibility of undergoing a correction toward the symmetrical triangle's lower trendline around $1,200, or a 15% price decline from current levels. 

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Filing suggests SEC is exploring grounds to deny spot Ether ETFs

Ethereum turns deflationary for the first time since the Merge — ETH price still risks 50% drop

A bearish technical setup and a declining number of Ether whales pose downside risks for ETH’s price.

The annual supply rate of Ether (ETH) slipped below zero for the first time since Ethereum’s transition to proof-of-stake via the Merge in September. The reason? A spike in on-chain activity amid a massive cryptocurrency market crash

Ether turns deflationary for real

As of Nov. 9, more Ether tokens are being burned than created as a part of Ethereum’s fee-burning mechanism. Simply put, the more on-chain transactions, the more ETH transaction fees get burned. 

On a 30-day timeframe, the Ethereum network has been burning ETH at an annual rate of 773,000 tokens against the issuance of 603,000 tokens. In other words, ETH’s supply is going down by 0.14% per year.

Ether supply growth as of Nov. 11. Source: Ultrasound.Money

Overall, the Ethereum network has burned 2.72 million ETH since the fee-burning mechanism was introduced in August 2021. That amounts to the permanent destruction of nearly 4 ETH per minute.

Ethereum’s transaction fees spiked to their highest levels since May 2022 due to traders rushing to transfer their ETH to and from exchanges amid the dramatic collapse of FTX

Ethereum transaction fees performance in the last six months. Source: YCharts

In detail, nearly 1 million ETH has left exchanges in November, according to data from Glassnode.

Ether balance on all exchanges. Source: Glassnode 

Many analysts see Ether’s deflationary prospects as a bullish signal, which should boost its overall scarcity. But the ongoing deflationary rate is a product of current ETH price volatility, which may hurt its recovery prospects in the near term.

Ether’s price in danger of another 50% crash

Ether’s price dropped nearly 20% month-to-date and was trading around $1,250 on Nov. 11 after it had rebounded from its $1,075 local low.

Furthermore, Ether’s price action has also entered the breakdown stage of its prevailing symmetrical triangle pattern, which may push the price down further by another 50% from current levels.

Related: Bitcoin price hits multi-year low at $15.6K, analysts expect further downside

Symmetrical triangles are continuation patterns, meaning they typically resolve after the price breaks out of their range while pursuing the direction of its previous trend. As a rule of technical analysis, the pattern’s profit target is measured after adding the triangle’s height to the breakout point.

ETH/USD 3-day price chart featuring symmetrical triangle’s breakdown setup. Source: TradingView

Applying the theory to Ether’s symmetrical triangle places its downside target at around $675 by December 2022, down about 50% from current prices.

More bearish arguments stem from a recent decline in the supply held by Ethereum’s richest investors.

Notably, the duration of Ether’s November downtrend has coincided with the drop in Ether supply held by addresses with a balance between 1 million ETH and 10 million ETH.

Ether supply percentage held by addresses with 10K–10M ETH balance. Source: Santiment

Conversely, addresses with a balance between 1,000 ETH and 10,000 ETH have risen during the price decline.

This could mean two things. First, addresses with over 10,000 ETH tokens reduced their holdings and thus landed in the smaller cohorts.

These cohorts may include exchange wallets that have witnessed massive ETH outflow amid the FTX fiasco.

Ether supply percentage held by addresses with 10–10K ETH balance. Source: Santiment

Second, the 10–10,000 ETH cohort saw Ether’s price decline as a “buy the dip” opportunity, which boosted its control over Ether’s supply in November.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Filing suggests SEC is exploring grounds to deny spot Ether ETFs

Bitcoin, Ethereum Technical Analysis: Ethereum Back Above $1,300 to Start the Week

Bitcoin, Ethereum Technical Analysis: Ethereum Back Above ,300 to Start the WeekEthereum remained close to a three week high on Monday, as prices rallied following a turbulent weekend. Bullish sentiment appears to have somewhat returned to crypto markets to start the week, with the market cap trading 1.56% high as of writing. Bitcoin was also in the green in today’s session. Bitcoin Bitcoin (BTC) was trading […]

Filing suggests SEC is exploring grounds to deny spot Ether ETFs