ETH drops sharply within 15 minutes by 0.69%: $2,000 technical breakdown triggers leveraged liquidations

ETH-0.88%

From 13:00 to 13:15 UTC on June 1, 2026, ETH saw a sharp drop of 0.69% within 15 minutes. Its price fell from 1,990.05 USDT to 1,972.16 USDT, with a swing of 0.90%. The market is in an oversold state after losing the key $2,000 support, with volatility noticeably increasing.

The main driver behind this abnormal move is deleveraging clearance in the derivatives market. ETH contract open interest hit a historical high in May, with a notional value of about 16 million ETH at $3.18 billion. High-leverage long positions were concentrated in the $1,967–$2,050 range. When the price approached $2,000, a chain liquidation was triggered: on May 29, a whale’s 25x long opened at $2,040.15 was liquidated at $1,967.1—just $45 away from the entry price. Also the same day, another whale sold 10,000 ETH within 30 minutes, and cumulatively sold 45,000 ETH within a week, totaling about $92.15 million. At the same time, the technical picture broke down: on the 4-hour chart of May 28, a death cross appeared; EMA50 stood at $2,104 as a technical resistance, and RSI entered an oversold range, triggering algorithmic sell orders.

In addition, on-chain whale activity is resonating with ETF capital outflows. In late May, multiple dormant addresses were activated: on May 27, a dormant whale transferred 3,466 ETH (about $7 million) to a major exchange; on May 26, an ICO participant transferred 2,500 ETH (about $5.32 million). Both appear to be signals prepared by long-term holders to liquidate. ETF funds continued to see net outflows: in January, net outflows exceeded $353 million; by late May, outflows intensified further, adding to spot-market selling pressure.

With ETH now having fallen below the key $2,000 support, it may continue ranging while searching for a bottom in the short term. Investors should watch the strength of support in the $1,950–$1,970 range, on-chain whale fund flows, and changes in ETH ETF sentiment, and remain alert to the risk of cascading sell-offs triggered by further deleveraging liquidation of leveraged positions.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third-party sources and is for reference only. It does not represent the views or opinions of Gate and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Virtual asset trading involves high risk. Please do not rely solely on the information on this page when making decisions. For details, see the Disclaimer.
Comment
0/400
No comments