
Ethereum has slipped back below $2,300, leaving traders to decide whether a fragile band between roughly $2,100 support and $2,350–$2,400 resistance is a simple shakeout or the prelude to a deeper retrace before any long‑promised run toward $4,000.
Summary
- ETH trades just under $2,300 after failing to hold the $2,350–$2,400 zone, with Binance and Gate data showing roughly 2% daily losses and $2,300 acting as an intraday pivot.
- Phemex analysis flags support around $2,100–$2,176 and resistance at $2,350 then $2,586, with ETH below key short‑term moving averages, negative MACD, and an oversold CRSI in the mid‑20s.
- Standard Chartered research cited by Investing.com still sees a path back toward $4,000 in 2026 if institutional demand, staking‑driven supply reduction, and on‑chain activity improve, but warns ETH could revisit levels near $1,400 first.
Ethereum (ETH) is back under pressure, trading just below $2,300 and forcing everyone to ask the only question that matters: is this simply a shakeout or the start of a deeper retrace? According to Gate market data, ETH/USDT last changed hands near $2,299.99, down about 2.01% over the past 24 hours, after briefly challenging the $2,350–$2,400 area earlier in the week.
Short term, the tape looks heavy. Binance data show ETH slipping under $2,300 to around $2,294.89 with a roughly 2.23% daily loss, reinforcing the idea that $2,300 has flipped from a support zone into an intraday pivot. Recent technical work from Phemex’s research desk puts immediate support in the $2,100–$2,176 band, with resistance stacked around $2,350 and then $2,586, and notes that ETH remains below its 10‑day moving average and key EMAs on the daily chart.
The market is still digesting earlier gains, and momentum is not on the bulls’ side right now. The MACD sits firmly negative, while an oversold CRSI around the mid‑20s hints that forced selling may be closer to the end than the beginning if macro conditions cooperate.
Macro and flows will decide whether $2,100 holds or breaks. Yahoo Finance notes that broader crypto prices have been trading nervously ahead of the next Federal Reserve meeting and geopolitical headlines, with ETH failing several times to sustain moves above $2,400 this month. At the same time, derivative positioning has shifted toward more cautious leverage, and spot volumes have normalized after March’s spikes, reducing both upside and downside extremes in the very near term.
Medium term, there is still a coherent bull case, but it depends on catalysts that are not yet fully priced. In March, Investing.com highlighted Standard Chartered research arguing that Ethereum’s path back toward $4,000 in 2026 will depend heavily on renewed institutional demand, ongoing supply reductions from staking, and continued growth in stablecoin and DeFi usage on the network. That same analysis warned that ETH could revisit lower levels — even down toward $1,400 — before a more durable uptrend resumes, given how far it ran in prior cycles.
Under $2,300, ETH is in a fragile range where $2,100 is your first real line in the sand and $2,350–$2,400 is the ceiling that must crack to talk about any serious upside. If global risk sentiment stabilizes and on‑chain activity improves, a grind back into the mid‑$2,000s is plausible in the coming months; if macro or regulatory shocks hit, the market has room to flush toward those deeper supports before any of the long‑term $4,000‑plus targets can be taken seriously.

