
As the year draws to a close, Ethereum’s price appears stagnant. Beneath this surface calm, however, significant activity is unfolding, starkly contrasting the narrow trading range observed in recent days. The market’s tension stems from a clear divergence: outward pessimism is being countered by substantial accumulation behind the scenes, as short-term products see outflows while major addresses increase their holdings.
Currently trading just below the $3,000 threshold at approximately $2,904, Ethereum sits roughly 38% below its 52-week high. Price action has been confined largely to a band between $2,700 and $3,300 in recent weeks, painting a picture of indecision.
The technical setup appears fragile. A bearish signal emerged from a daily chart formation resembling a “Death Cross,” where the 100-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) crossed below the 200-day EMA, reinforcing overhead resistance. Furthermore, the price trades about 5% below its 50-day moving average. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) reading of 42 indicates neutral-to-weak momentum conditions.
Trading volumes on centralized exchanges have thinned considerably year-end. This low liquidity environment prolongs consolidation phases but may also amplify future price movements in either direction once larger orders enter the market.
On-chain metrics reveal a clear pattern of accumulation by large holders over the past 30 days. Wallets holding significant ETH balances have added approximately 800,000 ETH to their positions. This activity suggests that long-term investors are using the current price level and weak sentiment to build positions in anticipation of higher future valuations.
In contrast, capital is exiting exchange-traded Ethereum products. Just before the weekend, ETH-linked ETFs recorded net outflows of around $52.7 million. This trend aligns with a broader “risk-off” approach in traditional markets at year-end, where many institutional investors are reducing rather than expanding risk exposure.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Ethereum?
A significant market-clearing event occurred on December 26th with a record-breaking options expiry. Ethereum options worth roughly $23 billion expired on the Deribit platform. This event removed a substantial block of hedging positions from the market.
Analysts view this as a type of reset for the derivatives segment. With many previously locked-in strategies now dissolved, clearer trend movements could emerge in January. In the short term, however, this expiry did not trigger a decisive breakout, with the price deadlock persisting.
Overall market sentiment continues to be weak. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index reads approximately 24, signaling “Extreme Fear.” This mood stems from several factors: repeated failures to break key resistance levels, the technically damaged chart structure, and ongoing macroeconomic uncertainty.
While the Ethereum blockchain itself operates stably, isolated incidents within the wider crypto ecosystem are weighing on confidence. A recent hack of Trust Wallet involving about $7 million made headlines, accompanied by increased volatility in projects like the Flow blockchain. Such news particularly affects retail investors, fostering caution towards riskier positions — a dynamic that indirectly impacts Ethereum.
As the new year begins, two price zones are particularly critical:
The current landscape is thus defined by the discrepancy between weak price action, pessimistic sentiment, and simultaneous clear accumulation by large holders. Whether the cautious ETF flows or the long-term accumulation by major investors will prevail in early 2026 is likely to determine Ethereum’s next significant trend.

