Ethereum (ETH) Price: Drops Below $2,000 as ETF Outflows Hit $392 Million

TLDR

  • Ethereum fell below $2,000, dropping 5% in 24 hours and 6% on the week
  • Spot ETH ETFs recorded seven consecutive days of net outflows totaling $392 million
  • Apparent demand for ETH hit its lowest level in 16 months
  • Key support sits at $1,911, with analysts watching $1,750 as the next major level
  • Exchange reserves have fallen from 22 million ETH in 2023 to near 15 million ETH

Ethereum slipped below the $2,000 mark on Friday, March 27, 2026. The move triggered over $111 million in long liquidations in a single 24-hour period, according to Coinglass data.

Ethereum (ETH) Price

The drop extended ETH’s weekly loss to 6%, pushing monthly returns into negative territory.

Geopolitical pressure played a role. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps issued warnings to workers at industrial sites in Israel and Gulf states ahead of a planned retaliatory strike. This followed US and Israeli attacks on Iranian industries, adding to broader market risk aversion.

Ethereum ETF demand has dried up fast. Spot ETH ETFs recorded seven straight days of net outflows, totaling roughly $392 million. Institutional interest, a key driver of price recovery, has stalled.

Analyst Ted Pillows posted on X that ETH ETF outflows reached $92.5 million in a single day, with BlackRock alone selling $43.2 million in Ethereum.

$ETH ETF outflow of $92,500,000 🔴 yesterday.

BlackRock sold $43,200,000 in Ethereum. pic.twitter.com/TO1s9byxEq

— Ted (@TedPillows) March 27, 2026

Retail sentiment has also cooled. The Coinbase Premium Index fell further into negative territory, showing US traders are selling or staying on the sidelines.



Data from Capriole Investments shows apparent demand for ETH has been negative since early March, hitting a 16-month low.

Technical Picture Points Lower

On the daily chart, ETH trades below its 20-day EMA. The 50-day and 100-day EMAs sit well above at $2,180 and $2,430, showing the broader trend remains corrective.

ETH Daily Technical Outlook:$ETH closed bearish as it’s simply mirroring Bitcoin’s overall sentiment. We should see further downward pressure, although a short-term bullish pullback and then a bearish move will result in a short opportunity 🤔 pic.twitter.com/cpajMsx1rs

— CRYPTOWZRD (@cryptoWZRD_) March 28, 2026

Analyst CryptoWZRD noted that a close below $2,200 earlier in the week was the first warning before “further declines.” With $2,100 and $2,000 now broken, the next key zone is $1,750–$1,850.

Analyst CyrilXBT shared a chart showing ETH trading well below its 200-day EMA near $2,766. He warned that a break below the $1,750 low could push ETH toward the $1,400–$1,500 area.

ETH – $2,064

Similar story to BTC but weaker.

– Crashed from $4,000+ to $1,750 lows – massive downtrend since October.
– EMA 200 is way overhead at $2,766, acting as a ceiling.
– The pink box around $2,200–$2,400 was a supply zone – price got rejected there and is now fading… pic.twitter.com/wv4UKq0DaR

— CyrilXBT (@cyrilXBT) March 27, 2026

Supply Data Shows a Different Picture

One contrasting data point is exchange reserves. According to CryptoQuant data shared by analyst James Easton, Ethereum held on exchanges has dropped from over 22 million in 2023 to near 15 million ETH. Easton described whales as “stacking and staking.”

However, falling exchange reserves alone do not confirm a price recovery. The data shows coins leaving platforms but does not confirm buying intent.

On the institutional buying side, BitMine Immersion wallets bought 117,111 ETH over three days, per Lookonchain. The firm had previously confirmed a purchase of 65,341 ETH.

ETH open interest reached 14.72 million ETH, even as funding rates turned negative.

Immediate support sits at $1,911, followed by $1,741. A break below $1,741 would confirm continuation of the current downtrend.

ETH0,35%
BTC-0,53%
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin