Ethereum is pushing toward $2,200. The macro environment is uncertain. And top analyst Darkfost has identified a signal in the derivatives market that has not appeared in nearly three years — emerging at precisely the moment the price is testing a level that matters.
The signal comes from the ETH Taker Buy Sell Ratio on Binance — a measure of whether buyers or sellers are dominating perpetual contract activity on the exchange that processes more than a third of all ETH open interest globally. After an extended period of seller dominance, the ratio has returned above 1.0, with a monthly average of approximately 1.016, and has held there for several consecutive days. The last time this setup was observed was in 2023.
That three-year gap is the detail that elevates the current reading from a routine metric improvement to a structural development. Derivatives markets are where conviction is expressed with leverage — where participants put real capital behind directional views with amplified consequences. When buyer dominance returns to that market after nearly three years of absence, it is not a technical footnote. It is a behavioral shift from the participants who feel the market most acutely.
Darkfost’s assessment is measured: this is the early stage of a more constructive trend, not its confirmation. The macro environment has not been resolved. But the derivatives market has started moving in a direction it has not moved in three years — and that timing, against the $2,200 test, is not coincidental.
37% of All Ethereum Derivatives Flow Through Binance
Darkfost’s first point of context is the one that gives the current reading its full structural weight. Binance accounts for over 37% of total ETH open interest globally — meaning more than a third of all leveraged ETH positioning in the world sits on a single venue. When the derivatives signal on Binance flips from seller-dominant to buyer-dominant, it is not a reading from a peripheral platform. It is a reading from the venue that processes the largest share of the market’s directional conviction.
The mechanism the ratio measures is straightforward and worth stating precisely. The Taker Buy Sell Ratio tracks the relationship between market buy and sell volumes on perpetual contracts. Above 1.0, buyers are dominant — more capital is entering through market buy orders than market sell orders. Below 1.0, sellers control the flow. For nearly three years, the ratio held below 1.0 on Binance. It has now moved above it, with a monthly average of 1.016, and has sustained that level for several consecutive days.
What makes the current shift specifically constructive — rather than simply positive — is how it is unfolding. There are no excessive spikes. No sudden, violent imbalances of the kind that typically precede liquidation cascades in derivatives markets. The ratio is climbing gradually, methodically, in a way that reflects genuine behavioral change rather than a temporary flush of short positions.
Darkfost names this explicitly: gradual shifts in derivatives markets are structurally healthier than sharp ones. A slow return of buyer dominance builds a more durable foundation than a rapid one. The market is not overheating into the signal. It is growing into it — and that distinction, for Ethereum at $2,200, is the difference between a setup and a trap.
Ethereum Tests Resistance as Recovery Structure Builds
Ethereum is extending its recovery attempt, now pushing toward the $2,200–$2,250 region, a level that is beginning to define short-term resistance. The chart shows a clear shift in behavior following the February capitulation: instead of continued downside, ETH has formed a series of higher lows, indicating that buyers are gradually regaining control.
This change is meaningful, but still incomplete. Price is interacting closely with the 50-day moving average (blue), which is flattening after a prolonged decline. That suggests momentum is stabilizing. However, ETH remains below the 100-day (green) and 200-day (red) moving averages, both trending downward, which keeps the broader structure bearish.
Volume dynamics support the recovery narrative, but cautiously. The spike during the sell-off marked forced liquidations, while the subsequent lower volume during the rebound suggests a controlled, less speculative move higher.
The key level to watch is the $2,200–$2,400 range. A clean break and consolidation above this zone would confirm a shift in market structure and open the path toward the 100-day average. Failure to break higher would reinforce this as another lower high within a broader downtrend.
For now, Ethereum is transitioning — not trending — with early signs of strength, but no confirmation yet.
Featured image from ChatGPT, chart from TradingView.com

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