Ethereum Investors Expect a Price Drop:Three Datasets Suggest They Have a Point

Ethereum exchange inflows are at historic lows. The taker ratio has been below 1 for most of the past year. Three datasets share one conclusion.
Key Takeaways
- ETH at $2,163 on Binance, the ceasefire spike to $2,280 nearly fully reversed
- Exchange inflows at 260K ETH – historic low for the entire chart period
- Taker buy/sell ratio at 0.999, persistently below 1 since mid-2025
- Passive limit bids holding price – not aggressive buyers
- Next structural support is the April 3-5 base at $2,030 to $2,060
From April 3 to April 5, Ethereum did almost nothing. Price compressed between $2,030 and $2,060 on volume so thin it barely registered, the flattest, quietest stretch on the visible chart. No direction. No conviction. The market was not waiting to sell. It was not waiting to buy. It was waiting for something to happen.

On April 8, something happened. A single four-hour session produced the largest volume bar on the chart and drove ETH from roughly $2,100 to $2,280, a $180 move on one catalyst. The US-Iran ceasefire announcement was the only moment of genuine buyer aggression visible across the entire period. It looked like the start of something. It was not.
The Reversal Took Less Time Than the Spike
By April 9, that move is almost entirely gone. Three consecutive red candles have retraced from $2,280 back to $2,163, each on declining volume. Price has broken back below the $2,175 resistance line. The most recent candle reached $2,186 and immediately rejected. The ceasefire premium took one session to build and less than 24 hours of trading to remove.
The compression base of $2,030 to $2,060, the floor the market built during three days of complete inactivity — is now the only structural support with evidence behind it. The on-chain data explains why the reversal was so clean.
READ MORE:
Crypto Market Gives Back the Ceasefire Rally: What Happens Next Depends on 3 Developments
Historic Low Inflows: Two Ways to Read Them
Exchange inflows across all venues have fallen to 260,000 ETH, one of the lowest readings on the CryptoQuant chart going back to April 2025. During the mid-2025 rally from $2K to $4K, inflows regularly exceeded 1.5 million to 3.25 million ETH per period. The February 2026 spike back toward 2.3 million coincided with ETH crashing from above $3K to $2K, panic selling, coins moving to exchanges to be liquidated.

The bullish reading of 260K is straightforward: nobody is sending ETH to exchanges to sell. Supply pressure is minimal.
The taker ratio punctures that reading.
What the Ratio Actually Shows
When ETH moved from $2K to $4K in mid-2025, the taker ratio never sustained a move above 1. The rally was not driven by aggressive market buyers, it was driven by liquidity gaps and passive demand, limit bids sitting at specific levels and getting filled as price drifted into them. No force behind the move. Which is why the move did not hold.

The ratio has spent most of the period since May 2025 below 1, currently sitting at 0.999. Passive buyers are holding price at the $2,030 to $2,060 base. Every recovery toward $2,175 or above gets absorbed by market sell orders. Low exchange inflows mean few new coins are arriving, but the coins already positioned are being used to sell into every bid. Not a flood of supply. A steady absorption of demand.
The taker ratio spent most of the past year below 1 with one exception: the ceasefire candle. That session the ratio spiked as genuine buyers entered aggressively. Then Iran accused the US of three violations within 24 hours. The aggression left with the news.
What the Data Is Actually Saying
The $2,030 to $2,060 base is likely to be tested before any sustainable rally begins. That level held during three days of dead compression in early April. It broke briefly on April 2 before recovering. A third test, arriving within the next few sessions at the current pace of the red sequence, will determine whether ETH finds a capitulation flush that resets the taker ratio with genuine buyer conviction, or whether the passive bid quietly gives way without the volume spike that typically marks a real bottom.
If Islamabad talks this Saturday produce a genuine ceasefire framework, the setup for another spike candle exists. The April 8 move proved the market can travel $180 in a single session when conviction arrives. A confirmed diplomatic breakthrough with Hormuz reopening would be a larger catalyst than the initial announcement, not a smaller one, and the suppressed inflow environment means there is less selling supply to absorb on the way up.
But that is the scenario the data does not currently support. The taker ratio is below 1. Every rally is being sold. The passive bid is the only thing between $2,163 and a retest of the pre-ceasefire floor. Whether that floor holds cleanly or requires a flush below $2,000 first is the question the next few sessions will answer, and the current structure gives no reason to expect the clean version.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.









