Ethereum has come under intense selling pressure, recording a sharp 28% decline since last Friday as the price decisively lost the $3,000 psychological level. What initially appeared to be a controlled pullback quickly escalated into one of the most aggressive downside moves seen in recent months, reflecting a sudden shift in market sentiment and risk appetite across the crypto space.
On January 31st, the Ethereum market experienced a major capitulation event. ETH collapsed from above $3,000 to the $2,350 zone in a matter of hours, marking one of the steepest single-day corrections of this cycle. The speed and magnitude of the move suggest forced selling rather than orderly distribution. As price accelerated lower, a dense cluster of stop-loss orders and liquidations was triggered, amplifying downside momentum and overwhelming bid-side liquidity.
This rapid breakdown erased weeks of bullish positioning almost instantly. Traders who had positioned for continuation above $3,000 were caught offside. Leading to a broad reset in derivatives exposure and sentiment. The psychological impact of losing such a widely watched level further intensified the sell-off, reinforcing risk-off behavior across both spot and futures markets.
As Ethereum stabilizes below former support, investors are now reassessing whether this move represents a temporary washout or the early stages of a deeper corrective phase. The coming sessions will be critical in determining whether demand can re-emerge after this violent reset.
Market-Wide Deleveraging Resets Ethereum’s Derivatives Landscape
A CryptoQuant analyst explains that recent on-chain data confirms the Ethereum sell-off was driven by a market-wide leverage flush rather than organic spot distribution. According to the Ethereum Long Liquidations (All Exchanges) chart, total liquidated long positions surged to approximately $485 million, marking the second-largest liquidation event since October 10th.
These spikes force a reset of the derivatives market by rapidly unwinding over-leveraged positions following an extended period of risk buildup.

However, a closer look reveals an important divergence. When cross-referencing global liquidation data with the Binance (All Symbols) chart, Binance recorded only around $40 million in long liquidations during the same move. This means Binance accounted for less than 10% of total global liquidations. Despite being one of the largest derivatives venues by volume. This imbalance indicates that other exchanges concentrated excessive leverage and aggressive risk-taking, triggering far more severe liquidation cascades.
This discrepancy implies that traders on Binance were either less overextended or employed stricter risk management. Allowing them to withstand the sharp downside move more effectively. In contrast, other platforms bore the brunt of forced deleveraging.
From a broader perspective, this type of long squeeze tends to purge speculative excess. While painful for bullish positioning, it often sets the stage for stabilization as the market searches for a new equilibrium. Monitoring open interest and funding rates outside Binance will be critical, as the core drivers of volatility clearly originated beyond its ecosystem.
Price Breaks Down as Bearish Momentum Accelerates
Ethereum’s price structure has deteriorated sharply, and the chart highlights how decisively the market has shifted into a bearish regime. After failing multiple times to reclaim the $3,000–$3,200 zone, ETH broke down aggressively, slicing through former support levels with little resistance. The recent move below $2,400 marks a clear expansion of downside momentum rather than a controlled pullback.

From a trend perspective, ETH is trading well below its short- and medium-term moving averages, with the 50-day and 100-day MAs now acting as dynamic resistance. The downward-turning slope of these averages reinforces the likelihood that sellers will target rallies rather than extend them. The 200-day moving average, sitting much higher, confirms that the broader structure has shifted away from a bullish trend.
Volume behavior adds another layer of concern. The sell-off toward the $2,300 area was accompanied by elevated volume, signaling forced selling and capitulation rather than organic distribution. This trend aligns with recent liquidation data and indicates that the market aggressively flushed out leverage.
In the short term, the $2,300–$2,200 zone is a critical area to watch. It represents the first meaningful support after the breakdown. A failure to stabilize here would open the door to deeper retracements. The chart suggests the path of least resistance remains to the downside.
Featured image from ChatGPT, chart from TradingView.com

