ETH Briefly Falls Below $2,500 as Exchange Inflows and Tariff Jitters Trigger Sell-Off
Ethereum (ETH) came under pressure late in the session, briefly breaching the $2,500 mark amid surging volume and growing signs of large-scale distribution. The move follows renewed macroeconomic uncertainty, with global markets reacting negatively to escalating tariff risks and trade-related tensions.
The drop was accelerated by on-chain data showing a notable spike in centralized exchange activity — most prominently, a 385,000 ETH transfer to Binance. This raised alarms among market watchers, suggesting that whales or institutions may be quietly exiting positions.
ETH swiftly fell to $2,499.09 before stabilizing near $2,506, as short-term buyers stepped in. However, the recovery remains tentative, with momentum indicators still skewed to the downside.
Technical Breakdown
- ETH traded in a 1.95% range, moving between $2,551.09 and $2,499.09 over the last 24 hours.
- A rising price channel was in place earlier in the session but broke down sharply during the final hour.
- The steepest decline occurred between 01:53–01:54, when ETH dropped from $2,521.35 to $2,499.09 on heavy volume (over 48,000 ETH).
- Price stabilized shortly afterward, consolidating between $2,504 and $2,508.
- The $2,500 mark now serves as a key short-term support, though sentiment remains cautious as distribution patterns persist in volume data.
As the broader market continues to digest geopolitical developments, ETH remains vulnerable to further volatility — especially if large holders keep rotating out of risk.





















