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Ethereum price tests $2,100 as oil, ETF pressure mounts

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The Ethereum price pullback toward $2,100 has turned a short-term price correction into a broader test of the market’s conviction in one of crypto’s largest assets.

Data from CryptoSlate show that ETH has fallen nearly 10% over the past week, wiping out its May gains and bringing traders’ focus back to the $2,000 level.

This price performance came as selling pressure spread across spot markets, derivatives, and regulated investment products.

The weakness has left Ethereum price caught between two competing forces. In the near term, rising oil prices, exchange inflows, aggressive futures selling, and ETF redemptions have weighed on the token.

Over a longer horizon, supporters, including BitMine Chairman Tom Lee, say Ethereum’s role in tokenization and agentic artificial intelligence remains intact, creating a sharper divide between the current price action and the asset’s structural investment case.

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How oil pressure is weighing on the Ethereum price

Lee has placed the first part of Ethereum’s price decline outside crypto itself, arguing that oil has become the largest macro headwind for ETH.

The BitMine chairman said rising crude prices represent the biggest source of pressure on Ethereum, pointing to what he described as a record inverse correlation between ETH and oil.

For traders, the Ethereum oil correlation matters because crude is acting as a proxy for inflation, liquidity stress, and broader risk appetite.

Ethereum’s Record Inverse Correlation (Source: Tom Lee)

In that setup, crude’s rally has coincided with Ethereum’s slide, making energy markets an important part of the current crypto selloff.

Oilprice.com data show crude has advanced more than 54% since the US-Iran war began on Feb. 28, pushing prices above $100 and to their highest level in years.

The move has added another layer of pressure to markets already sensitive to inflation, interest rates, and liquidity expectations.

Higher oil prices can act as a tax on consumers and businesses by raising transport, production, and energy costs. They can also complicate the outlook for central banks by keeping inflation risks elevated.

For crypto assets, which often trade as high-liquidity, high-beta expressions of risk appetite, that backdrop can reduce demand quickly when traders begin to cut exposure.

Ethereum price has been particularly exposed to that shift because the token entered May in recovery mode. A move toward $2,400 had started to rebuild confidence, but the rise in crude prices coincided with renewed weakness across digital assets.

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However, as oil climbed over the past weeks, ETH steadily lost momentum and moved back toward the lower end of its recent range.

Still, Lee has described the oil-linked pressure as “short-term tactical noise,” suggesting the drag could ease if crude prices stall or reverse.

Ethereum’s Inverse Correlation With Oil (Source: Tom Lee)

That view keeps the focus on oil as the immediate macro trigger, while leaving room for Ethereum’s longer-term thesis to reassert itself once the market moves beyond the current inflation and liquidity concerns.

Binance flows and futures selling show pressure moving into the market structure

While the macro backdrop set the tone for Ethereum’s decline, on-chain and derivatives data show how the pressure moved through the market.

CryptoQuant data show Binance recorded sustained positive ETH netflows during the first half of May, meaning more ETH was deposited onto the exchange than withdrawn.

Ethereum Netflow (Source: CryptoQuant)

That shift is important because exchange inflows increase the amount of liquid available for trading, even when the deposits are not sold immediately.

The move was large enough to change the market’s short-term balance. More than 225,000 ETH moved into Binance in a single day, pushing the seven-day moving average of exchange netflows to its highest level since late 2022.

The timing amplified the signal because ETH was already losing strength after trading near the $2,400 region.

Large transfers to exchanges can reflect several motives. Some holders may be preparing to sell, others may be positioning for hedges, and some may be moving collateral for derivatives trades.

In a declining market, however, a surge in deposits tends to increase concern that more supply could enter order books as buyers become more cautious.

That helped explain why the Ethereum price pullback accelerated as ETH approached $2,100. The token was no longer dealing only with macro pressure from oil and rates. It was also absorbing fresh exchange supply from large holders, forcing the market to find a new level at which buyers could absorb the additional liquidity.

The pressure then moved into futures markets. CryptoQuant data show Binance taker sell volume climbed above $1.1 billion within a single hour over the weekend as ETH moved near $2,100.

Ethereum Taker Sell Volume (Source: CryptoQuant)

Taker sell volume tracks aggressive market selling, where traders hit existing bids rather than placing passive orders. A spike in that metric during a decline often points to forced de-risking, stop-loss execution, or short-term traders leaning into downside momentum.

Ethereum ETF outflows add another price drag as institutional demand weakens

Ethereum’s decline became harder to dismiss as a short-term exchange-led move once regulated investment products started showing persistent outflows.

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SoSoValue data show US-based spot Ethereum ETFs recorded six consecutive trading days of net outflows, shedding more than $340 million.

Ethereum ETFs Daily Flows in May (Source: SoSoValue)

The redemptions came during the same period that ETH weakened, suggesting ETF demand was not strong enough to absorb pressure from spot sellers and derivatives traders.

Meanwhile, the retreat also appeared in global flows. CoinShares data show Ethereum investment products posted $249 million in weekly outflows for the period ending May 15, the largest single-week withdrawal since Jan. 30.

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