‘Ethereum’s Price Should Have Dropped Already’ – Analyst Explains The On-Chain Signal Behind The Warning

3 hours ago 4

Rommie Analytics

Ethereum has surged more than 25% since late March, pushing back toward levels that have defined the upper boundary of its recent recovery range and testing resistance that has capped every previous attempt higher. The move has been convincing enough to shift sentiment — but a CryptoQuant analyst has just flagged a divergence in the on-chain data that complicates the bullish reading and raises a question the price chart cannot answer on its own.

The analyst examines the Exchange Supply Ratio — a metric that tracks the relationship between exchange supply and the broader market. Historically, when this ratio drops sharply, it has been accompanied by price declines that form a bottom. The logic is straightforward: falling exchange supply means fewer coins available for immediate sale, which reduces selling pressure and signals that the market is approaching a zone where price tends to find support.

The current chart is showing that pattern — but only halfway. The ratio has once again fallen to low levels, confirming the reduction in exchange supply that the indicator is designed to detect. What is missing is the corresponding price decline that has historically accompanied it. Rather than dropping to form a bottom alongside the ratio, Ethereum’s price has continued holding relatively high.

That gap — between a ratio that says a bottom should be forming and a price that has not yet corrected to form one — is what the analyst has identified as the divergence that demands attention.

The Ratio Has Bottomed. The Price Has Not Followed. That Gap Tends to Close

The CryptoQuant analyst’s interpretation of the divergence is direct and does not overcomplicate what the data is describing. The supply reduction that the Exchange Supply Ratio tracks has already occurred — that part of the historical sequence is complete. What has not occurred is the corresponding price movement that has historically accompanied it. The market has received the signal and has not yet responded the way the pattern says it should.

 CryptoQuant

The analyst offers a specific explanation for the delay. Derivatives influence can sustain prices at levels that the underlying spot market structure would not support on its own. When leveraged positioning creates artificial demand — bids that exist because of borrowed capital rather than genuine buying conviction — the price can remain resilient longer than the on-chain data suggests it should. That resilience is not a contradiction of the signal. It is a postponement of its resolution.

The historical record on these divergences is consistent. They do not tend to resolve upward, with price rallying to justify the elevated level. They tend to resolve downward, with price declining to align with where the ratio says it should be. The gap between the ratio’s current position and the price’s current position is the distance the market may need to travel before the two return to alignment.

Ethereum’s 25% surge since late March has been real. The analyst’s warning is not that the recovery was wrong — it is that the price may still need to complete the bottoming process that the ratio has already signaled. The dip may be delayed. According to the data, it is likely not canceled.

Ethereum Reclaims Structure but Faces Heavy Overhead Resistance

Ethereum is trading near $2,280 after rebounding from the sub-$2,000 region, but the weekly chart shows a market still caught between recovery and structural resistance. The recent bounce has reclaimed the 50-week moving average, a constructive development, yet price remains compressed beneath the 100-week and 200-week moving averages, which continue to trend sideways to down.

 ETHUSDT chart on TradingView

This positioning matters. Historically, sustained bullish expansions occur when Ethereum reclaims and holds above these higher time frame averages. Until that happens, rallies tend to behave as relief moves within a broader consolidation or distribution range.

The $2,200–$2,300 zone is now acting as a pivot. It previously served as support during the 2024 structure and is currently being retested from below. The market’s ability to hold this level will determine whether the recent move evolves into a trend reversal or fades into another lower high.

Volume does not yet confirm a strong conviction. While the bounce from the lows was sharp, follow-through buying has been relatively muted compared to prior impulsive phases, suggesting cautious participation.

A break above $2,600 would shift the structure decisively and open the path toward $3,000. Failure to hold $2,200 would expose Ethereum to renewed downside, with $1,900 acting as the next major support zone.

Featured image from ChatGPT, chart from TradingView.com 

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