Ethereum has gained approximately 3.4% over the past 24 hours, extending a rebound signal that first appeared on technical charts yesterday. While the move may look like a routine bounce after a sharp decline, deeper on-chain data suggests something more significant may be unfolding beneath the surface.
Between January 27 and February 6, Ethereum plunged roughly 43%, triggering widespread liquidations across leveraged futures markets. During that same period, total open interest dropped from $15.9 billion to around $8.73 billion, representing a $7.17 billion collapse in leveraged positions. Such a decline confirms a major leverage flush, a process in which overexposed traders are forced out during rapid price drops. This typically removes speculative excess and resets market positioning.
However, while leverage was being wiped out and fear dominated sentiment, large holders were quietly accumulating.
Whales Add Nearly 9 Million ETH During the Crash
On-chain data shows that major Ethereum holders increased their combined balances from 104.48 million ETH on January 27 to 113.39 million ETH following the crash. That represents a net accumulation of 8.91 million ETH during one of the sharpest recent downturns. At an estimated average price near $2,100 during this period, the purchases equate to roughly $18.7 billion in value.
Rather than panic-selling into weakness, whales appear to have absorbed supply created by forced liquidations. This type of behavior typically reflects long-term positioning strategies rather than short-term speculation. Historically, aggressive whale accumulation during leverage collapses has often coincided with major market inflection points.
Importantly, whale behavior alone does not confirm a structural bottom. Broader investor cohorts must also align for a stronger thesis to form.
Long-Term Holders Resume Accumulation as Exchange Outflows Stay Negative
Earlier in February, long-term Ethereum holders showed hesitation. The HODLer Net Position Change metric remained negative for much of the month, indicating that even experienced investors were reducing exposure during the decline. Fear appeared to outweigh conviction at that stage.
That trend has now shifted. On February 21, long-term holders began accumulating again, adding 9,454 ETH in a single day by February 24. This renewed buying activity suggests that confidence is returning among more patient investors and that accumulation is no longer limited to whales alone.
Exchange flow data reinforces this narrative. Throughout the crash, exchange net position change remained negative, meaning more ETH was leaving exchanges than entering them. Coins moving off exchanges typically indicate investors transferring assets into private wallets rather than preparing to sell. On February 23, exchange outflows reached 227,300 ETH before moderating to 109,631 ETH the following day. Although the pace slowed, the broader trend still reflects net accumulation rather than distribution.
At the same time, short-term holders appear to be exiting the market. The share of Ethereum supply held for less than one week declined from 3.2% in early February to 2.1% currently. This drop suggests speculative traders have been flushed out, reducing short-term selling pressure and potentially strengthening the foundation for a more sustainable recovery.
Ethereum Tests Critical Reversal Zone After Bullish Divergence
Price structure is now beginning to reflect these accumulation signals. The Relative Strength Index has formed a bullish divergence: between November 21 and February 24, Ethereum recorded a lower low in price while RSI formed a higher low. This pattern often signals weakening selling momentum even before price fully recovers.
A similar divergence appeared on February 19 but failed to produce a sustained move, likely due to weaker participation from long-term holders at the time. The current setup differs because whales, long-term holders, and exchange flows are now aligned, increasing the probability of a stronger rebound attempt.
Ethereum is currently testing a key recovery zone. The first resistance level stands near $1,990. A break above this level could open the path toward $2,050, while a move beyond $2,240 would signal a broader recovery and potentially confirm that a structural bottom has formed. Such a move would represent roughly a 20% advance from current levels.
However, downside risks remain. If Ethereum falls below $1,740 before establishing higher highs, the structural bottom thesis would weaken significantly. That scenario would suggest whales may have accumulated near a local low while the broader downtrend remains intact.
For now, the data presents a rare alignment: nearly 9 million ETH accumulated during a $7 billion leverage collapse, long-term holders resuming accumulation, persistent exchange outflows, and speculative traders exiting the market. Ethereum’s next decisive move will determine whether this convergence marks the beginning of a sustained structural recovery or simply another pause within a larger bearish cycle.
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