Ethereum (ETH) has seen its Coinbase Premium Index on a 30-day moving average fall to its lowest reading since Jul. 2022, signaling that U.S. institutional demand has weakened to levels last observed during the deepest stretch of the previous bear market as the asset tests the $2,100 support zone.
What Happened: Coinbase Premium Hits 2022 Low
The Coinbase Premium Index compares ETH pricing on Coinbase — widely regarded as a proxy for U.S. institutional activity — against global benchmarks such as Binance.
The 30-day moving average of that metric has now dropped into deeply negative territory not seen since the worst phase of the 2022 downturn.
Sustained negative readings indicate that American investors are either actively selling or staying out of the market relative to global participants. The last time this indicator reached comparable levels, crypto markets were in full capitulation mode.
From a technical perspective, ETH's breakdown below $2,300 accelerated bearish momentum. Short-term moving averages have crossed below medium-term lines, and price remains well under the long-term trend indicator.
If the $2,100 level fails, the next meaningful support sits near $1,800 to $1,900.
Also Read: Analysts Eye $730 As BNB's Last Stand Before Mid-$600s
Why It Matters: Institutional Retreat Deepens
The absence of U.S. institutional buying carries weight because American flows have historically played a central role in past crypto rallies. Without that demand, the probability of a sustained near-term recovery diminishes.
However, the signal is not entirely one-directional. Extreme negative premiums have historically appeared during capitulation phases, when aggressive sellers exhaust available supply and the market eventually stabilizes as selling pressure fades.
A normalization of the Coinbase Premium — or an eventual return to positive territory — would indicate renewed institutional participation. Until that shift occurs, rallies into the $2,400 to $2,600 range are more likely to function as relief bounces than genuine trend reversals.
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