- Ethereum pulled back from $3.4k but saw renewed accumulation near $3,045
- Whales are rotating heavily from Bitcoin into ETH, signaling higher risk appetite
- Demand is improving, but bearish structure still threatens the $3k support level
After pushing toward a breakout earlier this week, Ethereum ran into firm resistance near the $3.4k zone and got turned away. The rejection sent ETH sliding down to a local low around $3,045, shaking out some late longs in the process. Still, the pullback didn’t linger for long.
At the time of writing, Ethereum was trading near $3,118, up a modest 0.03% on the day and about 2.5% on the week. That dip appears to have attracted buyers looking for discounted entries. Instead of panic, the reaction leaned more toward quiet accumulation, especially from larger players.
Whales Rotate Out of Bitcoin and Into ETH
With crypto stuck in a broader downtrend, capital flows have started to shift. Money moving into Bitcoin has fallen sharply, dropping from roughly $62 billion in July to just $4 billion recently. That slowdown opened the door for other assets to benefit, and Ethereum seems to be at the top of that list.
On-chain data tracked one particularly active whale. According to Lookonchain, this wallet swapped another 502.8 BTC for roughly 14,500 ETH, worth around $45 million. Over just a few days, the same whale converted 1,969 BTC, valued near $178 million, into 58,149 ETH, now worth about $181 million. That kind of rotation usually signals higher risk appetite and growing confidence in Ethereum’s upside narrative.

Fund Demand and Exchange Data Turn Supportive
Beyond whales, broader demand signals are starting to recover. Ethereum’s Fund Market Premium has stayed positive for two straight days, something that hadn’t happened in nearly two weeks. When this metric holds above zero, it typically means investors are aggressively accumulating ETH through funds, even paying a slight premium to do so.
At the same time, exchange data supports that trend. Ethereum’s Exchange Netflow has remained negative for five consecutive days, with roughly 32,000 ETH leaving exchanges at press time. Persistent outflows usually point to spot accumulation rather than selling pressure, which can tighten supply if demand holds steady.

Bearish Structure Still Clouds the Outlook
Despite improving demand metrics, Ethereum’s broader structure remains fragile. Downward momentum is still present, and indicators like the Directional Movement Index have dipped into oversold territory, with bearish pressure clearly in control. That imbalance means demand hasn’t fully closed the gap created by the recent selloff.
If these conditions persist, ETH risks losing the $3,000 support level and sliding toward $2,800. On the flip side, sustained accumulation could change the tone quickly. A close above the 20-day EMA near $3,121 would be an early signal, with the 50-day EMA around $3,288 acting as the next upside checkpoint. Whether buyers can maintain pressure from here is the key question.











