Ethereum is clinging to support near $1,800 as rising leverage, crowded longs, and persistent U.S. spot ETF outflows deepen downside risks for the second largest cryptocurrency.
- ETH broke below the key $2,000 level with sell pressure now concentrated around $1,800–$1,750
- U.S. spot ETH ETFs have seen 13 straight days of net outflows totaling about $695 million
- Derivatives data show elevated leverage and positive funding despite a weakening price structure
The same analysis shows Ethereum’s relative strength index hovering near 31, indicating conditions are close to oversold but without “an effective rebound signal,” leaving spot price exposed if forced liquidations begin to cascade.
ETF outflows and derivatives pressure converge
A recent crypto.news analysis observed that Ethereum had already broken below an ascending channel on the daily chart, warning that MACD had turned bearish and that failure to hold supports near $2,080 could open the door to a swift move toward the $1,800 region.crypto
In parallel, flows data compiled by CryptoSlate show that combined Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs have seen nearly $2.7 billion in net redemptions over the past two weeks, with allocators rotating into niche products tied to Solana, XRP, and Hyperliquid’s HYPE token instead.cryptoslate
Key support at $1,800 becomes sentiment pivot
Within this backdrop, ChainCatcher’s summary stresses that “short term risks are skewed to the downside,” arguing that Ethereum currently “maintains a weak structure against the backdrop of high leverage, crowded long positions, and ongoing ETF outflows,” making the $1,800 support “a key observation point for market sentiment and technical aspects.”
At press time in the ChainCatcher report, Ethereum was quoted around $2,019, but price action has been defined less by spot demand than by the slow bleed of ETF capital and a derivatives market where funding and leverage remain stubbornly tilted long even as the chart breaks down.
For now, the question facing traders is brutally simple: can Ethereum absorb yet another wave of ETF outflows and defend $1,800 without triggering the kind of liquidation cascade that the derivatives data are clearly primed for.
