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Ethereum exchange reserves have fallen to a record low even as the token trades near $2,15 and struggles to break out. CryptoQuant data cited in the report shows reserves are down about 77% from their 2021 peak, while CoinGlass data points to a surge in futures activity, with volume topping close to $50 billion in 24 hours.
The report highlights that the most notable activity is in derivatives. CoinGlass data shows open interest rising as futures volume jumped past $49 billion in a single day. It also cites $1.2 billion in futures inflows over 24 hours, suggesting traders are taking on more leverage while spot flows remain mostly flat.
The piece argues that this split—derivatives heating up faster than spot buying—can make price action choppier rather than producing a clean, sustained trend.
According to the report, the current setup points to weaker demand than the supply picture alone might imply. Even with supply on exchanges continuing to shrink, the market’s direction appears to depend on whether spot demand returns more consistently.
ETH is still above the $2,100 support level. However, the report says that level has not yet turned into a clear launch pad for a stronger move. It frames the market as waiting on spot demand, described as the missing piece.
For now, the picture remains uneven: exchange reserves are falling, but price action stays boxed in. With traders active and leverage rising, the report suggests Ethereum’s next clear move may depend less on shrinking supply and more on whether buyers return on the spot side.
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