Ethereum is struggling to reclaim the $3,000 level as selling pressure continues to weigh on price action. Recent data shows the market transitioning from panic-driven sell-offs to slower, more methodical distribution, indicating that many weak hands may have already exited.
What Happened: Late-Stage Correction
Ethereum remains locked below key resistance near $3,000 after multiple failed attempts to push higher. A recent report by XWIN Research Japan on CryptoQuant indicates Ethereum has entered a late-stage bearish phase that appears to be transitioning into a more range-bound structure.
The market is experiencing slower distribution rather than aggressive capitulation, suggesting exhaustion and indecision.
This shift often marks a critical inflection point where volatility compresses and price stabilizes within a defined range. The report notes such phases typically reflect a market searching for equilibrium, though this does not guarantee an immediate recovery.
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Why It Matters: Structural Improvement
On-chain indicators suggest the underlying market structure may be gradually improving despite price weakness. Data shows ETH leaving exchanges at the fastest pace of this cycle, increasingly associated with self-custody, staking and long-term holding.
Validator queue dynamics show a significant shift: for the first time in six months, the entry queue has surpassed the exit queue, with roughly 745,000 ETH waiting to be staked versus around 360,000 ETH queued for withdrawal.
The imbalance points to renewed staking participation and a tightening medium- to long-term supply profile.
The 90-day Spot Taker CVD indicates a transition away from strongly sell-dominant conditions toward neutral to mildly positive pressure, suggesting that aggressive selling is beginning to lose intensity.
Ethereum ETF flows remain negative on both daily and weekly timeframes, signaling that institutional demand via financial products continues to weigh on price action. Network activity remains resilient with deployed smart contracts reaching a record 8.7 million in Q4 2025, while on-chain real-world asset value expanded to approximately $19 billion.
Ethereum continues to trade in tight consolidation near the $2,900–$3,000 zone, struggling to reclaim the 50-day and 100-day moving averages now acting as dynamic resistance around the $3,200–$3,600 region.
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