- The ETH/BTC pair has dropped significantly, suggesting weakening Ethereum demand relative to Bitcoin.
- If BTC continues to outperform, Ethereum could face further downside pressure.
Ethereum’s [ETH] valuation against Bitcoin [BTC] has plunged to a five-year low. Historically, BTC consolidation or local tops have triggered capital inflows into high-cap altcoins, fueling short-term ETH rallies.
In mid-May 2024, the ETH/BTC pair surged to a three-month high, posting daily gains exceeding 10% as BTC faced resistance at $70K.
Notably, while Bitcoin extended its decline, ETH/BTC held firm, with its 1-day chart indicating sustained capital inflows.
This strength translated directly into ETH’s price action.
During the same period, ETH posted its largest single-day gain, soaring 19.25% to $3,697.80, marking its longest green candlestick and confirming a surge in bullish momentum.
A similar rally followed post-election. As Bitcoin hit its historic $99K milestone, investor caution triggered capital rotation into Ethereum.
The ETH/BTC pair turned bullish, with ETH posting nearly 10% single-day gains, reclaiming $4K for the first time in nine months.
ETH/BTC at five-year low: What It means for Ethereum’s short-term outlook?
Fast-forward five months, and the ETH/BTC pair has plunged to a five-year low, directly impacting Ethereum’s price action.
For the first time in two years, ETH has lost the critical $2,000 support zone. Panic selling was bound to follow.
Meanwhile, BTC dominance remains firmly above 60%, despite fragile market sentiment. Historically, a weakening ETH/BTC ratio has aligned with Bitcoin dominance surges.
It reinforces the ongoing capital shift toward Bitcoin over altcoins. Does this mean Ethereum’s short-term outlook will remain bearish?
As per the chart below, Ethereum’s Cost Basis Distribution (CBD) highlights key support zones based on recent accumulation trends.
Over the past week, ETH briefly dipped below the major $1.88k cluster, but on-chain data indicates minimal engagement from addresses at this level, suggesting weak demand.
However, new accumulation has emerged at $1.9k, with 600k–700k ETH added, potentially establishing a stronger support zone.
If BTC breaks resistance, ETH could reclaim $2K, but the ETH/BTC downtrend raises concerns.
Ethereum’s historically high-risk, high-reward appeal seems to be fading during market downturns – a significant shift that could impact its long-term trajectory.