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Something Broke Inside Ethereum While Bitcoin Kept Absorbing the Hits
On-chain data reveals a sharp Bitcoin Ethereum divergence in taker volume. Bitcoin buyers hold ground while Ethereum sellers take full control.
Bitcoin dropped from $82,000 to around $77,000 between May 11 and May 18. Ethereum fell from $2,400 to $2,100 over a longer stretch starting in April. Two price declines, same market, same timeframe. What happened underneath them is where the story splits.
According to CryptoQuant, Bitcoin’s 30-day moving average of Net Taker Volume stood at positive $58 million as of May 18. That number has cooled. In April it was sitting closer to $243 million. But it never turned negative, and that gap matters more than most people are paying attention to.
Buyers Keep Taking the Hits on BTC
The buyers are still there. That is the short version. Despite a price pullback that spooked a decent portion of the market, takers on the Bitcoin side are continuing to absorb sell-side pressure. Per the CryptoQuant analysis, the positive taker volume reading means aggressive demand persists even as the price dips.
Ethereum peaked in Net Taker Volume back in early March. It has been a different kind of story since then.
By May 17, ETH’s Net Taker Volume had dropped to negative $113 million. Not cooling. Not flat. Negative. The shift into the red zone signals aggressive taker selling, and by the CryptoQuant reading, a clear lack of buyers willing to step in at current support levels. That is not a minor technical footnote.
ETH Sellers Have Taken the Wheel
The wider pattern of ETP flows had already hinted at something like this. Ethereum registered $81.6 million in outflows during a recent week, even as Bitcoin pulled in $192.1 million in net ETP inflows over the same period. The divergence wasn’t new. The on-chain data just made it measurable in a different way.
What CryptoQuant’s reading points to is not panic, not exactly. It’s more like market preference. Sellers are in control of ETH’s momentum. Buyers, for now, are not matching them.
Capital rotation is one explanation. It needs to be said cautiously. The data does not confirm where money is going. But Bitcoin absorbing pressure while Ethereum is selling off is the kind of gap that chain rotation analysts have been flagging for months. The market has not resolved it yet.
The CryptoQuant report flags one specific question worth watching. Whether Ethereum’s negative taker volume acts as a leading indicator for a broader market decline, or whether Bitcoin’s underlying buyer demand eventually pulls the whole market back up. No answer was given. The data does not offer one yet.
Bitcoin at $77,000 still has buyers willing to absorb. Ethereum at $2,100 does not, at least not in the same way. That is what the numbers say as of mid-May.