1. Home
  2. Proof-of-Stake

Proof-of-Stake

‘Performing as expected’ — Aptos Labs defends day 1 criticism

Aptos’ blockchain claims to handle three times the amount of transactions per second than Solana but day one of its launch saw the network transacting a much lower amount.

After four years of development and millions in funding, the layer-1 blockchain Aptos (APT) finally launched its mainnet on Oct. 17, albeit to somewhat mixed reception.

The proof-of-stake (PoS) blockchain has seen millions invested in it from venture capital firms and has previously claimed the ability to process 160,000 transactions per second (TPS).

However, some members of the community have pointed out that the claimed TPS is falling far short of expectations on the mainnet.

According to Aptos’ blockchain explorer, the network is seeing around 4 TPS at the time of writing, while some users on Twitter have reported not being able to send transactions.

Others on Twitter noticed the Aptos Discord was closed for a few hours after the launch of the mainnet, accusing the team was attempting to stop discussion around potential launch issues.

Cointelegraph reached out to Aptos for comment and was directed to a “Day one update” tweet by Aptos on Oct. 18. 

In the tweet, Aptos said the network is “performing as expected” with activity increasing as more ecosystem participants join. Cointelegraph was able to view a variety of transactions from users using its blockchain explorer.

Aptos also said it closed comments on its Discord and Telegram channels to “protect the community from scams” and they will “return to normal when appropriate.”

The tokenomics of Aptos is not yet publicly available, leading some to cite concerns that cryptocurrency exchanges such as Binance and FTX are listing its token without such information available to their customers.

Related: Court partially denies Aptos Labs' motion to dismiss Glazer's $1 billion lawsuit

Aptos has seen millions invested from venture capital firms, with the most recent round of funding in July netting Aptos Labs $150 million. A prior round in March raised $200 million with participants including Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), FTX Ventures and Coinbase Ventures.

Aptos Labs was created by former Meta employees Mo Shaikh and Avery Ching, who were involved in the failed Diem blockchain project, which wound down ​​in February of this year and sold its intellectual property and other assets.

The blockchain is built on a programming language originally developed for the defunct Meta-built Diem blockchain.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: Oscillators Indicate Neutral Momentum

What are the risks of the Ethereum Merge?

The mammoth task of merging Ethereum’s mainnet and Beacon Chain is finally complete, but what are the risks?

What are the risks and flaws of the Ethereum merge?

One of the foremost concerns regarding the Merge is that of centralization. Another potential concern is the risk of scams, as the general public may not be aware of how the Merge works.

A fundamental flaw in the Merge is that it will likely increase the concentration of power within the network. The more valuable a staker’s position is, the more they will be rewarded for validating blocks. This could lead to a situation where a small number of wealthy individuals or groups control the majority of the stake and have disproportionate influence over the network.

Five major organizations control 64% of the network’s stake. In the event of a contentious fork, these organizations could collude to choose which chain to support, potentially censoring transactions or double-spending funds. Already, critics are debating whether the Merge is a “rich get richer” scheme that will entrench the power of current stakeholders.

Since staking will be required to earn interest on one’s ETH holdings, those who cannot afford to stake may be priced out of the market. This could lead to increased centralization as only those with large amounts of money would be able to participate in staking.

It’s also not uncommon for scammers to take advantage of big transitions such as The Merge, pretending that users need to do something (usually involving giving up tokens) to upgrade. Wallet upgrades are also a potential source of scams, as users may be tricked into downloading malicious software masquerading as an official update.

Lastly, miners who have been mining in Ethereum’s mainnet for years may yet decide to continue on Ethereum’s old chain. After all, many of these miners have likely incurred huge electricity and hardware expenses and may feel that they have more to gain by sticking with the tried-and-true mainnet. 

This could lead to a split in the community, with two competing versions of Ethereum running concurrently. While this scenario is unlikely, it’s still a possibility that investors should be aware of.

Will the Merge change the Ethereum ecosystem?

The Merge does not change anything for ETH holders and other non-node operating users. There are a few necessary adjustments required of operators, developers and providers, though.

Users that own or use ETH do not need to change or update anything on their wallets or funds because of the Merge. Wallets work just the same as they did pre-Merge, and the Ether held in them has not changed in value or quantity. The entire history of the network since genesis also remains intact despite transitioning to a new consensus mechanism.

The only thing that changes for ETH holders is how the network operates and processes transactions. The Merge affects miners, node operators, and developers more than it does regular users. For example:

  • Staking node operators and providers will need to run both consensus and execution clients, as third-party endpoints for obtaining execution data will no longer work post-Merge. They will also need to set a fee recipient address for transaction fees and maximal extractable value.
  • Infrastructure providers and non-validating node operators will also need to run clients for both the execution layer and the consensus layer.
  • Smart contract and decentralized application (DApp) developers need to familiarize themselves with changes related to block timing, block structure, opcode changes, sources of on-chain randomness and more.

How does Ethereum’s new consensus mechanism work?

Whereas miners in a proof-of-work system put their capital at risk by investing energy to validate a block, validators in a proof-of-stake system put their cryptocurrency at stake.

In order for a validator to be up and running on the network, they first need to deposit 32 ETH into a smart contract. Once deposited, the funds are locked and the validator is ready to begin staking. The staked Ether serves as collateral, meaning it can be destroyed if the validator acts maliciously. 

There are also other ways to stake Ether aside from running a validator node. One could participate in staking via a centralized exchange, join a staking pool or delegate staking via a staking service provider.

Related: Architectural components of the Ethereum blockchain: What are they?

The validator is essentially responsible for checking the validity of new blocks propagated on the network, as well as creating and propagating new blocks. Some of the benefits of a PoS system are:

After the validator executes the transactions in the block, they check the signature of that block to confirm its legitimacy. If it is a valid block, the validator sends an attestation, or vote, for that specific block across the network.

Under PoW, mining difficulty dictates block timing. However, in PoS, the tempo is fixed into slots (12 seconds) and epochs (32 slots). A validator is randomly selected to serve as a block proposer for every slot, during which this validator will be responsible for creating a new block and sending it to other network nodes.

What does the Merge mean for Ethereum miners?

The network now uses proof-of-stake to validate transactions, thereby rendering Ethereum GPU mining largely unprofitable if not completely obsolete.

The Ethereum network’s mainnet has relied on proof-of-work since its genesis, with miners validating blockchain transactions left and right. However, Ethereum’s proof-of-stake layer, or the Beacon Chain, uses builders who bundle transactions together and validators to verify transactions. The amount of cryptocurrency a builder or validator owns will determine their ability to select or validate blocks.

In a bid to make the network more sustainable, the Merge combined these two layers and adopted PoS fully, making Ethereum mining an unproductive way to earn rewards as validators are now more incentivized to preserve the network.

The network previously held around 95% of total GPU hashing power, allowing miners to validate transactions and earn rewards. Under PoS, a validator’s cryptocurrency is at stake, which acts as a disincentive for them to act maliciously.

Following the Merge, Ethereum’s hash rate has also noticeably dropped to zero and has stayed there since. Generally, lower hash rates mean that a network is using less computing power to add and verify transactions on a blockchain. In the case of Ethereum, the drop in hash rate is mainly because miners have either turned off their rigs or switched to other PoW-based cryptocurrencies that are more profitable to mine.

Related: What is PoW Ethereum (ETHW), and how does it work?

What is the Ethereum Merge?

The Merge integrated Ethereum’s original execution layer with its new proof-of-stake consensus layer, officially transitioning the network’s consensus mechanism to proof-of-stake.

Formerly referred to as Ethereum 2.0, Ethereum’s consensus layer has now fully merged with the original blockchain (execution layer). The Merge was completed on September 15, 2022, marking the Ethereum network’s transition from proof-of-work (PoW) to proof-of-stake (PoS). According to the network, the Merge has brought down Ethereum’s energy consumption by around 99.95%.

From a technical perspective, the Merge saw Ethereum’s original execution layer, or the mainnet, merged with its new PoS consensus layer called the Beacon Chain. The Merge is just the first step in Ethereum’s development roadmap, which includes succeeding stages such as The Surge, The Verge, The Purge and The Splurge.

According to Ethereum co-creator Vitalik Buterin, the Merge marks about 55% of the development work set to be done on the network. Ultimately, the goal is to make the network more scalable, sustainable and secure while remaining decentralized.

The Merge eliminated the need for PoW, enabling the network to be secured by Ethereum staking. Staking gives Ethereum holders a chance to collect rewards by providing the necessary computing power to validate transactions and secure the network. This also means that since the Merge, all transactions on the network are now being validated by Ethereum stakers instead of miners.

The second major shift triggered by the move to PoS is the diminished issuance of Ether (ETH) via rewards to validators for their efforts in preserving the network, resulting in ETH becoming a deflationary asset. 

Currently, Ethereum’s staking mechanism only accepts deposits that cannot be withdrawn. At the moment, billions worth of ETH is staked on the network — and stuck therein — until a withdrawal feature is added by Ethereum’s developers down the line.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: Oscillators Indicate Neutral Momentum

51% of Ethereum blocks are now compliant with OFAC standards, raising censorship concerns

One month after the Merge, MEV-boost relays expanded its market share as block builders, data shows.

One month after the Merge, 51% of Ethereum blocks were compliant with OFAC standards, according to blockchain development Labrys' data, as MEV-Boost relays take over market share

On Twitter, users highlighted how the figures represent a milestone towards censorship, as more blocks are under surveillance:

OFAC stands for the Office of Foreign Assets Control, the entity in charge of enforcing United States economic sanctions, while MEV-Boost relays are centralized entities that act as trusted mediators between block producers and block builders. In this way, all Ethereum proof-of-stake (PoS) validators can outsource their block production to other builders. 

This metric tracks how many blocks were built by OFAC-compliant MEV-Boost relays since the Merge. Due to Ethereum's upgrade to a PoS consensus, MEV-Boost has been enabled to a more representative distribution of block proposers, rather than a small group of miners under proof-of-work (PoW).

Speaking to Cointelegraph in September, Lachan Feeney, Labrys' CEO, noted that in the case of hard censorship, that would mean that “no matter how long you waited, no matter how much you paid, you would never get to a point where those sanctioned transactions would get included in the blockchain.”

Under a hard censorship scenario, “nodes would be forced by regulation to basically discard any blocks with any of these transactions in them.”

He also noted that even with soft censorship, when sanctioned transactions would eventually be validated, it would likely result in long waits and high-priority fees, making the user experience substandard.

According to Labrys' page, there are currently seven major MEV-oost relays including Flashbots, BloXroute Max Profit, BloXroute Ethical, BloXroute Regulated, BlockNative, Manifold and Eden. "Of the 7 available major relays, only 3 do not censor according to OFAC compliance requirements. OFAC compliant relays will not include any transactions that interact with the Tornado Cash smart contract or other sanctioned wallet addresses as designated by OFAC," stated the company.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: Oscillators Indicate Neutral Momentum

Ethereum price eyes 35% rally after 6,000 ETH gets burned in one week

A new crypto project aiming to mint tokens from burning Ether is behind Ethereum's deflationary turn.

Ethereum's native token, Ether (ETH), looks ready to undergo a massive rally due to a mix of technical and fundamental factors.

From a technical perspective, ETH's price now eyes a 35% rebound by the end of October after holding testing a key support level. This level is a rising trendline that has capped Ether's downside attempts since June 2022, as shown below.

ETH/USD weekly price chart. Source: TradingView

In other words, traders have shown interest in buying Ethereum tokens near this level in recent weeks. Meanwhile, the accumulation sentiment has prompted the price to rise toward another significant level — a horizontal trendline resistance near $1,800, about 35% above the current price. 

Ether supply drops by 6K ETH

The bullish technical outlook for Ether takes further take cues from its depleting supply in recent days.

Ether supply has dropped by nearly 6,000 ETH (~$7.9 million) since Oct. 8. That marks the Ethereum network's first deflationary move — where more ETH is being destroyed than created — since its switch from proof-of-work (PoW) to proof-of-stake (PoS) via the Merge one month ago. 

Ethereum supply since Merge. Source: Ultrasound.Money

Users must pay so-called "gas fees" to validators to confirm their on-chain Ethereum transactions. Historically, more Ethereum network traffic resulted in higher gas fees and more revenue for validators.

But after the August 2021 EIP-1559 update, a portion of the gas fee is permanently removed from Ether circulation. Simply put, more ETH gets burned in a high-demand environment.

The same started happening after Oct. 8 with evidence showing that a new crypto project named XEN Crypto is increasing network traffic. In the last seven days, XEN Crypto has contributed to the burning of 4,490 ETH tokens against 16,690.52 ETH tokens.

Ethereum burn leaderboard. Source: Ultrasound.Money

XEN Crypto started over the weekend with no supply.

Still, it was free to mint, requiring users to only pay ETH gas fees. In other words, a new project made Ether deflationary for the first time since Merge, currently comprising over 40% of all Ethereum transactions.

ETH price long-term outlook remains bearish

Ethereum's outlook for the long term tilts bearish, nevertheless, due to constant macro warnings led by the Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes to hot inflation. Ether remains susceptible to these risks owing to its consistently positive correlation with U.S. equities.

ETH/USD and Nasdaq Composite daily correlation coefficient. Source: TradingView

Thus, a drop below Ether's current rising trendline support — as explained above — could mean further declines in the event of a technical breakdown, as show in the chart below.

ETH/USD weekly price chart featuring ascending triangle breakdown. Source: TradingView

Ascending Triangles are continuation patterns that resolve after the price breaks out in the direction of its previous trend. In ETH's case, the prevailing trend is downward, suggesting that the token's next course will be bearish if it breaks below the triangle's rising trendline support.

Related: Why is the crypto market down today?

As a rule, an ascending triangle breakdown prompts the price to fall to a level at length equal to the triangle's height. Therefore, ETH's profit target comes to be near $750, down approximately 40% from today's price.

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.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: Oscillators Indicate Neutral Momentum

Cardano founder points out flaws in Ethereum and Bitcoin

Charles Hoskinson, the founder of Cardano, shares his critical views on the two leading cryptocurrencies in an exclusive Cointelegraph interview.

Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson has been pointing out the flaws affecting the Ethereum protocol following its latest upgrade.

A major issue, according to Hoskinson, is the locking mechanism that prevents investors from withdrawing their staked Ether (ETH) from the Beacon Chain until the completion of the next upgrade. 

“Ethereum is the Hotel California of cryptocurrencies. You can check in but you can't check out,” said Hoskinson in a recent Cointelegraph Interview.

According to Hoskison, this mechanism heavily impacts ETH's liquidity and could eventually spark a liquidity crisis.

“You'll have less and less Ether trading in the marketplace," he explained. "And then what will ultimately happen is you'll have a liquidity crisis where a lot of volatility comes in.”

Cardano’s founder is also critical of the proof-of-work mining system that powers Bitcoin (BTC), which he sees as wasteful and unnecessary in the long run.

While Hoskinson acknowledges the importance of proof-of-work in the process of creating new Bitcoin units, he doesn’t believe it's effective when BTC is used as a financial instrument. According to Hoskinson, once Bitcoin units are mined, they could be moved onto a different, less energy-consuming, blockchain in the form of wrapped assets:

“That other network could use it for stablecoins, it could use it for DeFi lending, it could use it for payments. Anything you want.”

To find out more about Hoskinson’s thesis on Bitcoin and Ethereum, don’t miss the full interview on our YouTube channel and don’t forget to subscribe!

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: Oscillators Indicate Neutral Momentum

After Ethereum Merge, GPU prices may stabilize with dipping demand

The prices of many popular GPUs, such as Nvidia’s RTX3080, have dropped by nearly 60% over the last 90 days across some parts of the globe.

Ethereum’s long-awaited transition to a proof-of-stake (PoS) consensus mechanism kicked off on Sept. 15, thus finally putting its long-standing transaction woes in the rearview mirror. To this point, the network is now capable of processing anywhere between 20,000–100,000 transactions per second (tps) as opposed to its previous rate of just 30 tps. 

Furthermore, the Merge also saw the Ethereum network become up to 99.9% more energy efficient as compared to its previous iteration, thus allaying fears of its excessive energy consumption, a criticism that still lingers quite heavily in relation to Bitcoin (BTC).

Amid these developments, however, a question that has continued to pique the interest of many crypto enthusiasts: “What happens to the graphics processing unit market now that the transition has concluded?”

It is worth noting that following the Merge, the blockchain transitioned from its energy-intensive proof-of-work (PoW) mechanism to a PoS framework. As a result, miners that used to process transactions and produce blocks were replaced by ecosystem participants who can now stake their Ether (ETH) holdings to become network validators. As a result, Ethereum-centric graphics processing unit (GPU) mining has been entirely eliminated from the picture.

The numbers don’t lie

After the conclusion of the upgrade, the value of numerous sought-after GPUs has dropped quite drastically. For example, reports indicate that the value of Nvidia’s highly popular RTX 3080 has dipped from $1,118 to approximately $700 (over the last three-month stretch) within China. Similarly, the price of GPUs manufactured by firms like MSI has dropped by $280 since late July.

Recent: Is Bitcoin an inflation hedge? Why BTC hasn’t faired well with peak inflation

To get a better idea of whether these price drops could have been influenced by the hype surrounding the Ethereum Merge, Cointelegraph reached out to Crypto White, the pseudonymous chief technical officer for ZK.Work — a mining platform for zero-knowledge proofs. He pointed out that before the Merge, ETH had a total of 860 TH/s hashing power, of which less than 200TH/s went to Ethereum Classic (ETC) and ETHW, a PoW fork of ETH that went live after the upgrade, alongside other mining projects, while 660TH/s was shut down temporarily.

Alluding to ETC’s above-shown hash rate chart, White noted that the incoming hashing power seems to have been exiting the network gradually since mid-Sept i.e., the time of the Merge. In this regard, it is speculated that the price of ETC did not rise as expected, with the influx of this computing power leading several miners to shut down their operations permanently. White added:

“This shows that the cryptocurrency mining market has a huge number of idle GPUs and the revenue from traditional mining cannot support their running costs, so they are shutting down and facing the choice of waiting for new mining opportunities or selling them second-hand.”

He further claimed that many used NVIDIA 30 series GPUs have recently entered the secondary market for sale, decreasing the price of GPUs even more. However, as potentially lucrative minable coins continue to enter the market in the near term, White believes that these GPUs may once again find utility. 

What lies ahead for the GPU market?

As is evident by now, the Ethereum Merge has served as a major technical and industrial upgrade for the cryptocurrency mining sector as a whole. Providing his take on the matter, Ilman Shazhaev, founder and CEO for blockchain gaming metaverse Farcana, told Cointelegraph that despite this apparent setback, the GPU industry is now an evergreen niche, especially with the continued emergence of different PoW protocols with each passing day:

“Despite the transition, there is no reduction in the number of protocols that needs GPUs, and this will help sustain the demand for these devices in the near future. Also, with the gradual embrace of metaverse-centric innovations, the demand for GPUs, which are a key component of most gaming consoles, will be sustained.”

In White’s opinion, GPUs will not become much cheaper anytime soon, with their prices most likely having stabilized around their current rates. In fact, he believes that the price changes we are witnessing now had “already been factored” in before the Merge, adding that to build momentum for the launch of their upcoming GPUs, manufacturers like Nvidia had already started clearing out their inventories sometime ago. He said:

Recent: The blue fox: DeFi’s rise and the birth of Metamask Institutional

“I believe the price of used GPUs will slowly decline, and low-end GPUs will probably go extinct from the market altogether. On the other hand, I believe demand for high-end GPUs will increase.”

Lastly, it should be noted that, in a scenario where there are no tokens to mine, it stands to reason that GPU prediction rates will also be affected, with most manufacturers most likely reverting back to their “order-based production” processes since the mining boom of the last few years had led to massive stockpiling.

ETH price action lackluster despite efficiency increase 

As noted previously, with the conclusion of the Merge, Ethereum’s energy consumption has gone down by a staggering 99.9%, resulting in a 0.2% reduction in global power consumption. Despite these significant developments, however, ETH’s price action has been extremely poor, almost unexpected in the eyes of many.

As can be seen from the chart above, since Sept. 16, the altcoin has slipped from $1,630 to its current price point of $1,330, showcasing a loss of approximately. 22%. In this regard, experts believe that this lack of positive price momentum could be due to upward movements having already been priced into the currency’s value a couple of weeks before the upgrade.

Thus, even though the Ethereum network has gotten rid of GPU mining completely, some sections of miners may still attempt to keep their cash-cow running, as is made evident by the fact that several proposals to copy the Ethereum blockchain, such as ETHW — while retaining mining capabilities — have gained some traction. That being said, while it is quite easy to develop such a token, it is extremely hard to convince people to use it. Therefore, it will be interesting to see how the future of Ethereum’s various PoW hard forks and the GPU market continues to unfold from here on out.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: Oscillators Indicate Neutral Momentum

T-Mobile Parent Company Says It Supports Ethereum As Giant Launches New Staking Validator

T-Mobile Parent Company Says It Supports Ethereum As Giant Launches New Staking Validator

The parent company of mobile communications giant T-Mobile says it’s launching an Ethereum (ETH) staking validator as part of its support for the world’s second-largest blockchain by market cap. According to a new press release, Deutsche Telekom is supporting Ethereum’s transition from a proof-of-work consensus mechanism into a proof-of-stake one by operating validator nodes through […]

The post T-Mobile Parent Company Says It Supports Ethereum As Giant Launches New Staking Validator appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: Oscillators Indicate Neutral Momentum

Ethereum Merge spikes block creation with a faster average block time

some of the evident improvements experienced by the blockchain post-Merge include a steep increase in daily block creation and a substantial decrease in average block time.

The Merge upgrade for Ethereum (ETH), which primarily sought to transition the blockchain into a proof-of-stake (PoS) consensus mechanism, has been revealed to have a positive impact on the creation of new Ethereum blocks.

The Merge was considered one of the most significant upgrades for Ethereum. As a result of the hype, numerous misconceptions around cheaper gas fees and faster transactions plagued the crypto ecosystem, which was debunked by Cointelegraph. However, some of the evident improvements experienced by the blockchain post-Merge include a steep increase in daily block creation and a substantial decrease in average block time.

Ethereum blocks per day. Source: YCharts

On Sept. 15, Ethereum completed The Merge upgrade after successfully transitioning the network to PoS. On the same day, the number of blocks created daily (EBC) shot up by roughly 18% — from approximately 6,000 blocks to 7100 blocks per day.

Ethereum average block time (EBT). Source: YCharts

Complementing this move, the average block time — the time it takes the miners or validators within a network to verify transactions — for Ethereum dropped over 13%, as evidenced by data from YCharts.

The above findings showcase the positive impact of The Merge upgrade on the Ethereum blockchain.

Related: Ethereum Merge was ‘executed flawlessly,’ says Starkware co-founder

Following the Ethereum upgrade, GPU prices in China witnessed a significant drop as the blockchain moved away from the power-intensive proof-of-work (PoW) consensus mechanism.

As Cointelegraph reported, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080’s price dropped from $1118, or 8,000 yuan, to 5,000 yuan within three months, according to a Chinese merchant. The merchant further stated that no one (in China) is buying new computers, let alone new GPUs.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: Oscillators Indicate Neutral Momentum

Solana Network Suffers Another Outage — Cyber Capital Founder Says Downtime Is ‘Another Consequence of Bad Design’

Solana Network Suffers Another Outage — Cyber Capital Founder Says Downtime Is ‘Another Consequence of Bad Design’The proof-of-stake (PoS) blockchain network Solana suffered another outage on September 30 and the network restart did not take effect until six hours later on October 1. Solana has suffered a myriad of network outages during the last year, and the blockchain’s latest downtime caused the network’s native currency to slide 4% lower against the […]

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: Oscillators Indicate Neutral Momentum

Ethereum fork token ETHPoW climbs 150% after smart contract hack — A fakeout rally?

ETHPoW's hash rate and total value locked have risen significantly during its latest bull run.

ETHW has logged a significant price rebound despite its blockchain network, ETHPoW, suffering a smart contract hack in the first week after its launch.

Bull trap risks surround ETHW market

ETHW rebounded more than 150% eight days after the attack and traded for around $10.30 on Sept. 27.

Fundamentally, this suggests that traders ignored the hack and trusted ETHPoW's long-term viability as a blockchain project.

But from a technical perspective, the ETHW price rally has accompanied weaker trading volumes. In other words, fewer traders have been involved in the pumping of the ETHPoW token's price in the past eight days, as the Bitfinex exchange data shows in the chart below.

ETHW/USD daily price chart. Source: TradingView

The growing divergence between ETHW's rising prices and falling trading volumes suggests that traders' interest in the ETHPoW token has been dwindling. In other words, ETHW's price risks a sharp correction in the coming days.

Related: Dogecoin becomes second largest PoW cryptocurrency

This "bearish divergence" setup is supported by a descending trendline that has served as resistance for ETHW since Sept. 2. 

On the four-hour chart below, traders have shown their likelihood of dumping their ETHW positions near the said resistance. Moreover, even the token's latest pullback move on Sept. 27 has originated near the same trendline, raising the possibility of an extended price correction.

ETHW/USD four-hour price chart. Source: TradingView

As a result, ETHW's short-term technical bias is skewed toward the bears. So, if its correction extends, the PoW token risks falling into the $8–$9 price range, which also coincides with ascending trendline support, or a 25% drop from current price levels.

ETHPoW hash rate recovers

On a brighter note, the ETHPoW's network hash rate has recovered significantly since the smart contract hack, rising from 29.44 TH/s on Sept. 19 to 48.48 TH/s on Sep. 27. Although, the current hash rate is still down about 40% from its record high of 79.42 TH/s.

ETHPoW hash rate performance since launch. Source: 2miners.com

Still, a rising hash rate means more miners have joined the ETHPoW network after its split from the Ethereum proof-of-stake (PoS) chain on Sept. 15. In theory, it should ensure better protection against potential 51% attacks

Simultaneously, ETHPoW has witnessed a growth in its network's total valued locked (TVL). As of Sept. 27, ETHPoW had 66,548 ETHW deposited across four decentralized exchanges functioning atop its blockchain compared to nearly 38,000 ETHW three days prior, or a 75% increase in the last three days.

ETHPoW TVL as of Sep. 27, 2022. Source: Defi Llama

Interestingly, UniWswap, a fork of the Ethereum blockchain-based decentralized exchange Uniswap, comprises more than 50% of the ETHPoW chain's TVL.

DApps functional atop ETHPoW chain. Source: Defi Llama

Other DApps include PoWSea, a nonfungible token ( marketplace, as well as exchanges PoWSwap and HipPoWSwap.

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.

Bitcoin Technical Analysis: Oscillators Indicate Neutral Momentum