Ethereum Faces Multifaceted Selling Pressure
Ethereum breached the psychologically significant $2,000 level on Friday, pressured by a confluence of three major factors: sustained institutional outflows, substantial profit-taking by an early investor, and the expiration of a large batch of quarterly options contracts.
Quarterly Options Expiry and Market Sentiment
The situation was exacerbated by the expiry of substantial quarterly options on the Deribit derivatives exchange. Ethereum contracts represent an open interest of $2.12 billion. The “max pain” point for these options sits at $2,250—well above the current trading price—creating structural downward pressure on the asset.
Concurrently, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index plummeted to a reading of 13. Historically, such extreme fear levels have often preceded periods of market bottom formation. Analysts suggest the next key support zone for ETH lies around the $1,800 mark. However, with ETF outflows continuing and elevated open interest, further short-term volatility is anticipated.
Institutional Exodus and Early Investor Moves
U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs have recorded their first consecutive weekly outflow series of the year. Net outflows on Thursday alone reached approximately $92.5 million, bringing the cumulative seven-day total to over $390 million. BlackRock’s fund was a notable participant, divesting Ethereum holdings worth $142 million. Competitors Fidelity and Grayscale also meaningfully reduced their positions.
Adding to the selling pressure, an early participant from Ethereum’s 2014 initial coin offering (ICO) moved a significant portion of holdings. The wallet address 0xd64A transferred 11,552 ETH, valued at roughly $23.4 million, to exchanges at an average price of $2,027 per token. This investor originally acquired ETH at $0.31 per unit. Despite these sales, the address retains holdings worth nearly $80 million.
Liquidation Cascade
The price decline triggered a wave of forced liquidations. Within a single hour on Friday, leveraged positions worth $180 million were liquidated, with a staggering $177 million of that total coming from long positions. Over a 24-hour window, total crypto market liquidations exceeded $440 million, impacting approximately 120,000 traders.
Silver’s Fate Hinges on Crucial Inflation Report
The silver market presents a stark dichotomy. While the industrial demand for the metal is experiencing a historic boom, its price has collapsed by 44% from the all-time high recorded in January. This persistent weakness, with the metal trading near $68.20 per ounce, is primarily attributed to a shifting monetary policy landscape. All eyes are now on the latest PCE inflation data, which is poised to deliver the next significant price catalyst.
Monetary Policy Headwinds Intensify
A hawkish reassessment from the U.S. Federal Reserve has been the primary anchor on silver’s performance. The non-yielding asset faces direct pressure from a strengthening U.S. dollar and rising real bond yields, which have climbed to 4.2%.
The central bank’s recent FOMC meeting delivered a sobering outlook. The Fed revised its inflation forecasts upward, and the latest “dot plot” indicates the possibility of zero to just one rate cut by December 2026—a stark departure from the three cuts previously anticipated. Fed Chair Jerome Powell added to the cautious sentiment, revealing that discussions about potential interest rate hikes have even occurred among policymakers.
Unrelenting Physical Supply Squeeze
Beneath the macroeconomic turbulence, the fundamental picture for silver is one of extreme tightness. The market is headed for its sixth consecutive annual deficit in 2026, with a projected shortfall of 67 million ounces. This is driven by inelastic industrial demand from the solar power, electric vehicle, and AI data center sectors, which now account for 59% of total consumption.
Further exacerbating the supply crunch are administrative actions in China. The government in Beijing has authorized only 44 companies to export silver, creating bureaucratic approval processes that can take up to 45 days and severely disrupt global supply chains. The current gold-to-silver ratio of 66 underscores this historic fundamental tension. Ratios at this level have frequently preceded powerful silver rallies in previous market cycles.
Bullish Long-Term Forecasts Persist
Despite the immediate challenges, major institutional analysts maintain bullish long-term price targets for the white metal:
In the immediate term, however, silver’s trajectory is entirely dependent on the PCE data release. A report confirming stubborn inflation risks a swift decline below the $70 per ounce threshold. Conversely, a softer inflation reading could trigger a rapid recovery rally toward $75. For the medium term, the structural supply deficit provides a solid foundation, offering robust support against a more severe sell-off.