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So I've been watching ETH lately and the charts from back in January were calling for a $3,600 target by February 2026, but obviously that didn't pan out the way analysts predicted. Current ethereum price is sitting around $2,320 as of now, which is a pretty significant pullback from where we were a few months ago. Interesting to see how these technical predictions age, right?
Back then the indicators looked pretty solid - MACD was showing strong upward momentum at 39.2, RSI was neutral around 66, and ETH had just broken above some key resistance at $3,177. Multiple analysts were aligned on the bullish case, talking about institutional accumulation and all that. The setup seemed textbook bullish with the moving averages stacking nicely and volume backing up the move on major exchanges.
But here's what actually happened - the current ethereum price movement tells a different story. We're down about 28% from that January prediction point. The bearish scenario that was mentioned as a risk (breakdown below support levels) seems to have played out more than the bullish case. RSI rolled over, MACD momentum faded, and broader market conditions shifted.
I think the lesson here is that even when you have solid technical setup and multiple analysts aligned on a target, the market can still surprise you. The $3,600 February 2026 target looked reasonable at the time based on the charts, but crypto doesn't always cooperate with our predictions. For anyone still holding or considering entries at current levels, the risk-reward has definitely changed from what it was a few months back.
The support zones that were identified ($2,775, $2,623) actually held up better than the upside targets, which is kind of the inverse of what bulls were hoping for. Anyway, just wanted to share this observation - sometimes the best trades are the ones where you admit a prediction didn't work out rather than doubling down on a broken thesis.