logo

Ethereum price crash to continue as rare pattern forms

By: bitcoin ethereum news|2025/05/03 06:00:05
0
Share
copy
Ethereum price has been in a strong downward trend against Bitcoin, and a rare chart pattern points to more downside. Ethereum (ETH) dropped to 0.01890, its lowest level since January 2020 and 80% below its 2021 high. This decline comes as Ethereum continues to lose market share across key sectors of the crypto industry. DeFi Llama data shows that protocols in its network processed $56 billion in April, lower than Solana’s (SOL) $72 billion. Ethereum is also losing ground to layer-2 networks, which aim to improve scalability and speed without compromising security. Base, a layer-2 network created by Coinbase, processed transactions worth $20 billion in April. Unichain, a L2 network recently launched in February, handled $3.4 billion, while Arbitrum processed $14.3 billion. In theory, Ethereum would have handled these transactions. Meanwhile, Ethereum has weakened further as Bitcoin’s dominance in the market has continued to climb. Bitcoin currently holds a 63% market share, up from a year-to-date low of 18% and at its highest level since November 2021. In contrast, Ethereum’s dominance has fallen to 7%, its lowest point since April 2018. Ethereum price technical analysis The weekly chart shows that the ETH/BTC pair peaked at 0.08810 in December 2021 and has since plunged 80% to its current 0.01890 level. Ethereum remains below both the 50-week and 100-week moving averages. Additionally, the Money Flow Index has continued falling and now sits at an oversold level of 14. The Average Directional Index has risen to 48.75, indicating that bearish momentum is still strong. Crucially, the pair has formed an inverse cup and handle pattern, a well-known bearish continuation signal. This pattern features a horizontal support line and a rounded top, often preceding further downside. If the pattern plays out, the next level to watch is 0.0070, which marked the bottom in December 2016. A drop below that would set the stage for a possible retest of the all-time low at 0.0019. Source: https://crypto.news/red-alert-ethereum-price-crash-to-continue-as-rare-pattern-forms/

You may also like

Naval personally takes the stage: The historic collision between ordinary people and venture capital

Naval personally stepped in as the chairman of the USVC Investment Committee. This SEC-registered fund launched by AngelList attempts to bring top private tech assets like OpenAI, Anthropic, and xAI to the general public with a $500 entry threshold. It is not just a new fund, but a structural experi...

a16z Crypto: 9 Charts to Understand the Evolution Trends of Stablecoins

Stablecoins are evolving from trading tools into universal payment infrastructure, and this process is quieter and more thorough than most people expected.

Refutation of Yang Haipo's "The End of Cryptocurrency"

This may be the true test of cryptocurrency. It's not about whether the price has reached a new high, nor about who will achieve financial freedom in the next bull market, but rather whether, after all the grand narratives have been washed away by cycles, it can still leave behind some simpler, more...

Can a hairdryer earn $34,000? Interpreting the reflexivity paradox of prediction markets

Prediction markets are essentially betting on reality, and when participants can access or even influence this path earlier, the market no longer just reflects reality but begins to shape it in return.

6MV Founder: In 2026, the "landmark turning point" for crypto investment has arrived

"I will deploy funds in 2026, so I will tell you this is the best year in history."

Abraxas Capital Mints $2.89 Billion USDT: Liquidity Boost or Just More Stablecoin Arbitrage?

Abraxas Capital just received $2.89 billion in freshly minted USDT from Tether. Is this a bullish liquidity injection for crypto markets, or is it business as usual for a stablecoin arbitrage giant? We analyze the data and the likely impact on Bitcoin, altcoins, and DeFi.

Popular coins

Latest Crypto News

Read more