
Key Highlights
- ETH traded near $2,306, almost flat over seven days.
- U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs ended the week with about $82.5M net outflows.
- Ethereum developers advanced Glamsterdam with a 200M post-upgrade gas limit floor.
Ethereum (ETH) stayed range-bound this week, trading near $2,306 as of May 2, with CoinGlass showing ETH down only 0.21% over seven days. The move signals consolidation rather than a clean breakout, especially as the token continues to hover around the psychological $2,300 level.
ETH price chart shows bulls defending $2,300
Ethereum’s daily chart shows ETH trading near $2,307, up about 0.63%, after buyers defended the lower end of the recent consolidation range, according to TradingView. The chart shows ETH attempting to hold above the $2,300–$2,310 area, which has now become the immediate level to watch.
The short-term structure remains cautious because ETH is still below the recent rejection zone near $2,400–$2,430. A clean daily close above that range would strengthen the recovery case and open room toward the next major upside zone.
On the downside, the key support sits near $2,280–$2,300. Below that, the moving-average cluster around $2,211 and $2,192 becomes important. A breakdown under those levels would weaken the current rebound and shift attention back toward the $2,100 region.
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is near 53, showing neutral-to-slightly bullish momentum. This means ETH is not overheated, but the chart still needs stronger volume and a breakout above resistance to confirm a trend reversal.
Ichimoku chart shows early trend improvement
Ethereum’s daily Ichimoku chart shows ETH trading at $2,312.65, up 0.84% on May 2, after opening near $2,300.40. The move places ETH almost exactly around the Ichimoku conversion line at $2,312.57, making this area the first short-term momentum test.
The base line near $2,265.86 now acts as dynamic support. Below that, the cloud support zone sits between $2,289.22 and $2,204.32, giving ETH a broader downside cushion between roughly $2,200 and $2,290.
The future cloud has started turning green, suggesting that bearish pressure has cooled from the late-February and March downtrend. However, the signal is still early. ETH needs a daily close above $2,380–$2,430 before the chart can confirm a stronger bullish reversal.
ETF outflows flipped
The main market story was ETF volatility. Farside Investors data shows U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs saw four straight daily outflows from April 27 to April 30, totaling around $183.7 million, before flipping to $101.2 million in net inflows on May 1.
That still leaves the week at roughly $82.5 million in net outflows, meaning Friday’s inflow improved sentiment but did not fully repair the weekly damage.
Derivatives remained heavy compared with spot activity. CoinGlass showed $17.91 billion in 24-hour ETH futures volume against about $794.8 million in spot volume, with $30.87 billion in Open Interest (OI) and around $15 million in ETH liquidations. This keeps ETH vulnerable to sharp moves if the price breaks either side of the current range.
On-chain dex volume drops
On-chain activity was mixed. DefiLlama showed Ethereum’s stablecoin market cap at about $164.46 billion, down 1.37% over seven days, while 24-hour Decentralized Finance (DeFi) fees stood near $585,711. Ethereum DEX volume was about $835 million over 24 hours, but seven-day DEX volume was down nearly 49.44%, showing weaker trading activity despite stable network dominance.
The strongest non-price catalyst came from core development. More than 100 Ethereum contributors gathered for the Soldøgn Interop to harden Glamsterdam implementations. The Ethereum Foundation said the week ended with three key goals delivered: a 200M post-Glamsterdam gas limit floor, stable ePBS implementations with external builders, and final EIP-8037 repricing numbers.
Ethereum’s official roadmap still lists Glamsterdam as the next upgrade in development for H1 2026, followed by Hegotá in H2 2026. That gives ETH a clear protocol catalyst, but the price has not yet priced it as a bullish breakout.
Ethereum’s week was not bearish enough to call a breakdown, but not strong enough to call a breakout. The better angle is: ETF demand tried to recover late, developers delivered progress, but the ETH price remains trapped near $2,300 until volume confirms direction.
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