Ethereum has lost the $2,100 level as selling pressure overwhelms a recovery that has been struggling to find structural support since the mid-May highs. The decline is uncomfortable — but a CryptoOnchain analysis has identified a contradiction in the network data that makes the current price weakness considerably more complex than a straightforward bearish reading suggests.
The contradiction sits between two data points that should not be moving in the same direction simultaneously. The ETH 2.0 Staking Rate has reached a new all-time high of 32.18% — the highest proportion of Ethereum’s total supply ever committed to the network’s validator infrastructure. More ETH is locked in long-term staking contracts than at any previous point in the asset’s history, reflecting a cohort of holders whose conviction about Ethereum’s long-term value has never been stronger or more structurally expressed.
Against that record commitment, the network’s organic activity tells the opposite story. Median token transfer size and transaction fees have collapsed by 80% to 90% compared to the 90-day baseline. The day-to-day utility that drives genuine demand for block space — the transactions, the DeFi activity, the NFT volume, the protocol interactions — has nearly evaporated. CryptoOnchain describes the current state of the Ethereum blockchain as an on-chain ghost town.
Record conviction on one side. Near-zero organic activity on the other. Both present simultaneously, in the same network, at the same price. The analysis examines what is holding the structure together — and the answer is the most alarming element of what the data reveals.
Record Staking And Empty Network
The CryptoOnchain analysis arrives at the question that the contradiction demands: if organic network activity has collapsed and US institutional spot demand has disappeared, what is keeping Ethereum’s price from reflecting those twin absences more severely?
The Coinbase Premium has dropped to -0.12 — confirming that American institutional spot buyers, who drove the most significant phases of Ethereum’s previous recoveries, have stepped back from active accumulation. The on-chain activity metrics confirm that retail and protocol users are similarly absent. The two categories of participants whose genuine demand has historically supported Ethereum price levels are both missing simultaneously.

The answer the analysis provides is offshore derivatives. Binance Funding Rates have surged 688% above the 90-day baseline, maintaining positive territory at +0.01. Speculative leveraged positioning on the world’s largest derivatives exchange is the force currently sustaining Ethereum’s price in the absence of the spot demand and network utility that would normally provide that foundation.
The structural assessment that follows is direct. Peak staking creates a genuine supply floor — 32.18% of total ETH locked in validators represents a meaningful reduction in immediately available sell-side supply that limits downside in a structural sense. But a price sustained by derivatives leverage rather than spot demand or network utility is a price resting on a foundation that can disappear instantly.
Leverage flushes do not arrive gradually. When funding rates at 688% above baseline encounter a catalyst that forces deleveraging, the adjustment happens in hours rather than days — and the supply floor provided by staking cannot absorb the speed of that kind of unwind.
Ethereum Bulls Defend The $2,100 Region
Ethereum continues trading near the critical $2,100 level after weeks of sustained selling pressure erased the recovery structure that briefly pushed price toward the $2,400 resistance zone earlier this month. The daily chart shows ETH trapped beneath the major resistance region between $2,280 and $2,380, an area that repeatedly rejected bullish momentum throughout May and prevented buyers from establishing a higher-high structure.
Technically, Ethereum remains below the 200-day moving average, which continues trending downward and reinforcing the broader bearish market structure. The rejection from the resistance zone also forced ETH back below the shorter-term moving averages, signaling weakening momentum as sellers regained control during the latest retracement phase.
Despite the weakness, bulls are still defending the $2,050–$2,100 support region aggressively. Price briefly dipped below this area but quickly recovered, suggesting demand remains active near local lows. This zone is becoming increasingly important because a decisive breakdown would likely expose Ethereum to a deeper move toward the broader demand region around $1,800–$1,900 highlighted on the chart.
Volume has gradually declined during the recent consolidation, reflecting market indecision rather than panic selling. For bulls to regain momentum, Ethereum likely needs to reclaim the $2,200 level first and then break decisively above the $2,300–$2,400 resistance cluster that has capped every recovery attempt since April.
Featured image from ChatGPT, chart from TradingView.com

2 hours ago
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