Ethereum slid to its lowest level in months on June 3, testing the $1,800 support zone as spot ETF outflows accelerated and macro headwinds pushed traders to the sidelines.
Ether fell 5.3% to $1,868.80 on June 3, breaching the $2,000 psychological level as spot ETF outflows reached $90.2 million in a single session.
"The ETF flow reversal is the clearest signal that institutional risk appetite has shifted," Karthik Subramanian, a crypto market analyst at FinanceFeeds, said. "When BlackRock's ETHA alone sees $44 million in redemptions, it's not retail selling — it's allocators cutting exposure."
Spot Ether ETFs recorded $90.2 million in net outflows on June 3, with BlackRock's ETHA losing $44.3 million, Grayscale's Ethereum Trust shedding $25.4 million and Fidelity's FETH dropping $15.6 million, per data from FinanceFeeds. The broader crypto ETF complex saw $609.3 million in combined outflows, with Bitcoin products accounting for $519.1 million. BlackRock's IBIT led Bitcoin redemptions at $388.6 million.
The $1,800 level represents Ethereum's last major macro support before a potential move toward $1,500, a zone not visited since late 2024. With cumulative ETF flows turning negative for May and macro uncertainty persisting, the next two weeks will determine whether long-term holders step in to defend the level or selling pressure deepens.
$420 Million in May ETF Outflows Weigh on Price
Ethereum's decline accelerated after spot Ether ETFs posted more than $400 million in net outflows during May 2026, reversing the $260 million in inflows recorded earlier this year. The shift coincided with broader risk-off positioning across digital assets as Bitcoin fell 4.1% to $66,884 on June 3, dragging the total crypto market capitalization below $2.5 trillion.
On-chain data from CoinGecko shows Ethereum's 24-hour trading volume reached $19 billion, suggesting active participation despite the price decline. The token's market capitalization stood at approximately $240 billion as of early June.
Long-Term Holders Stay Put as Short-Term Traders Exit
Despite the price pressure, on-chain metrics reveal a divergence between short-term speculators and long-term holders. Data from Glassnode shows that addresses holding Ether for more than 12 months have not meaningfully reduced their positions during the selloff, a pattern that historically preceded major recoveries.
Ethereum remains the largest smart contract blockchain by total value locked, with thousands of decentralized finance applications and stablecoin protocols continuing to operate on the network. The ecosystem's developer activity and ongoing protocol upgrades provide a structural floor beneath the price action, analysts said.
The immediate question for traders is whether $1,800 holds as support. A breakdown below that level could trigger a cascade of stop-losses and leveraged liquidations, accelerating the decline. Conversely, a successful defense of the zone could set the stage for a recovery once ETF outflows stabilize and macro conditions improve.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.