Ethereum Hits $1,800 as ETF Outflows Mount
Key Takeaways
- Derivatives Turn Defensive: Ethereum fell to $1,800 as liquidations rose and options markets favored downside protection.
- Onchain Activity Softens: TVL and fee generation declined, signaling cooling network demand.
- Institutional & Insider Pressure: ETF outflows accelerated, and a recent ETH sale by Vitalik Buterin added to cautious sentiment.
Ethereum (ETH) came under renewed selling pressure this week, sliding to the $1,800 level as positioning in derivatives markets shifted more defensively. A mix of long liquidations, softer on-chain activity, ETF outflows, and a recent token sale by co-founder Vitalik Buterin has weighed on sentiment in the near term.
Long Liquidations Pick Up as Traders Hedge Downside
ETH is down roughly 14% over the past 10 days, with the move lower accelerating over the last two sessions. As price pushed toward $1,800, about $224 million in leveraged long positions were wiped out – a sign that late bullish exposure was forced out as momentum turned.
At the same time, options markets are starting to reflect a more cautious tone.
Data from Deribit shows traders increasingly favouring puts over calls, with downside protection seeing noticeably stronger demand than upside exposure. That imbalance has pushed volatility skew higher, suggesting market participants are willing to pay a premium to hedge against further losses rather than position for a quick bounce.
Even with ETH now trading more than 60% below its all-time high, dip-buying interest has, so far, been limited.
Network Activity Cools Alongside Price
On-chain data is also beginning to mirror the softer price action.
Ethereum’s total value locked across decentralised finance protocols has drifted lower in recent weeks, reflecting a slowdown in fresh capital entering the ecosystem. Transaction fee generation has followed a similar path, pointing to reduced demand for blockspace, which is one of the network’s primary economic drivers.
Taken together, the drop in both TVL and fee revenue suggests usage across the network has cooled as volatility picked up.
Buterin Sale Adds to Short-Term Uncertainty
Blockchain analytics from Arkham Intelligence indicate that Buterin sold 3,788 ETH – worth roughly $7.3 million – over a three-day stretch.
He has previously liquidated ETH to fund charitable efforts and ecosystem development, but transactions involving prominent insiders tend to draw additional scrutiny when they coincide with broader market weakness.
Wallets associated with Buterin are still estimated to hold more than $430 million in digital assets, making the recent sale relatively small in the context of his overall exposure. Even so, the timing did little to support sentiment while prices were already trending lower.
ETF Outflows Suggest Institutional Caution
Institutional flows have also turned negative in recent sessions.
U.S.-listed spot Ether ETFs have seen steady redemptions since mid-February, trimming total assets under management as some investors appear to be stepping back from risk exposure at current levels.
Over the same period, flows into gold-backed funds have moved in the opposite direction. This divergence may point to a short-term rotation toward more traditional safe-haven assets amid ongoing volatility in digital markets.
Ethereum’s tight correlation with Bitcoin has also limited its ability to decouple from broader market pressure. With BTC trading below recent highs this week, ETH has struggled to build independent momentum.
Near-Term Outlook
With derivatives markets tilted toward hedging and institutional flows softening, the near-term backdrop remains cautious.
Unless network activity stabilises or inflows return, ETH may continue to trade defensively, with volatility likely to remain elevated while the market searches for stronger support.