Ethereum price dropped over 10% in the past 24 hours, falling below the $3,000 level. The decline came after the cryptocurrency broke through critical support at $2,900.
Ethereum (ETH) Price
The crash triggered a wave of stop-loss orders and resulted in $500 million worth of liquidated long positions. Of the $158 million in Ethereum-related contracts that were flushed out, $140 million involved long positions alone.
Trading volume surged to 33.2 billion, marking a 200% increase. The wider crypto market also experienced losses, declining 6.98% over the past day. Bitcoin, SOL, XRP, and DOGE followed similar downward patterns.
The market has fallen 20% in the last 30 days. Within several hours during the crash, an estimated $200 billion in crypto market value was wiped out.
On December 3, Ethereum activated its Fusaka upgrade. This marks the second major network upgrade of 2025.
The upgrade aligns executed and consensus-layer changes. It enhances Ethereum’s ability to handle more Layer 2 transactions, improving the network’s overall scale.
BitMine Immersion Technologies increased its Ethereum holdings by 96,798 ETH during the market downturn. The firm continued accumulating despite the recent crash, going against the trend of most other digital asset companies reducing their exposure.
The latest Ethereum price traded at $2,738. The MACD indicator shows negative divergence, pointing to a potential continuation of the downward trend.
The MACD histogram displays red bars, indicating persistent bearish sentiment. The Relative Strength Index sits at 32, placing it in deep oversold territory.
This RSI level suggests Ethereum is facing heavy selling pressure. However, it also indicates a possible reversal could occur.
The $2,700 and $2,500 zones represent crucial support levels. If Ethereum fails to hold these levels, the bearish trend could intensify.
A recovery from these support levels could push the price back toward $2,900 and $3,000. A move above $2,900 would signal a potential bullish reversal, while a drop below $2,500 could lead to further losses.
Despite the liquidations, derivatives investors remain active. The Ethereum Open Interest increased by $654 million following the dip, representing a 4.3% rise.
The Open Interest initially dropped alongside the price decline as long positions closed. As the bearish momentum slowed and price movement stabilized, speculators began opening fresh positions.
This high level of Open Interest typically leads to increased volatility. A large amount of leverage in the sector means sharp price swings can trigger cascading liquidations, which intensify the original price movement.
The post Ethereum (ETH) Price: Drops Below $3,000 as $500 Million in Longs Get Liquidated appeared first on CoinCentral.


