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Ethereum is showing early recovery signals after weeks of sustained selling pressure, though broader market risks remain a key factor. After a steep decline that pushed ETH dangerously close to the $2,000 level, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap has rebounded toward the $2,300–$2,400 range, offering cautious optimism to traders monitoring the move.
The recent rebound has been supported by technical improvements, including rising trading volume and an improving RSI (Relative Strength Index). Together, these signals suggest short-term bullish momentum may be building, with some analysts viewing the structure as a potential foundation for a more meaningful recovery if important resistance levels are overcome.
Despite the bounce, Ethereum’s recovery is not yet confirmed. ETH continues to trade below its 100-day and 200-day exponential moving averages (EMAs), which are widely watched trend indicators. Until price action climbs and closes above these EMAs, the dominant trend cannot be classified as fully bullish.
The 100-day EMA near $2,500 is the first major test. A sustained breakout above this level would indicate that buyers are regaining control of the medium-term trend and could attract additional capital. However, even if ETH clears the $2,500 area, it would likely face the 200-day EMA resistance wall near $2,800, a level often viewed as a key boundary between long-term bull and bear market structures.
For now, Ethereum’s next steps require patience. The market appears to be stabilizing after a significant correction, but a genuine trend reversal would require decisive action above $2,500 and a sustained challenge of the $2,800 resistance zone. Until those levels are reclaimed, the recovery remains promising but unconfirmed.

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