Ethereum price prediction as bounce above key moving averages has traders watching a potential breakout toward the $2,800 area — but a dense liquidation pocket still hangs below the market.
Summary
- Ethereum has reclaimed the 20-day and 50-day EMAs, carving a symmetrical triangle that points toward a $2,800–$2,850 upside target if bulls hold momentum.
- Coinglass data show about $1.8b in long liquidations sitting below $2,174, while a move above $2,400 could trigger roughly $792m in short liquidations.
- ETH trades near $2,201 alongside a broader majors grind higher led by Bitcoin around $73,778, with leverage stacked on both sides and execution risk elevated.
Ethereum price prediction
On the downside, derivatives positioning is creating a clear line in the sand. Coinglass data cited in the same report show that if ETH drops below about $2,174, cumulative long liquidations across major centralized exchanges would reach roughly $1.817 billion, concentrated in highly levered perp and futures positions. In contrast, a break above the $2,400 area would flip the script, triggering an estimated $792 million in cumulative short liquidations, potentially adding fuel to any upside move toward that $2,800–$2,850 target. In other words, price is pinned between a sizeable long liquidation air pocket beneath and a stacked short liquidation zone above.
Spot and derivatives traders are already starting to position around that range. According to crypto.news price data, Ethereum is currently trading near $2,201, up about 6.8% over the last 24 hours, with a session range between roughly $2,041.70 and $2,200.03 and 24‑hour volume around $27.76 billion. Bitcoin, which still sets the broader risk tone, is hovering close to $73,778, up 5.8% on the day, with a 24‑hour low of $69,460 and high of $73,770 on turnover above $55.4 billion. These moves suggest the latest bid in ETH is not happening in isolation, but as part of a broader grind higher in majors following the recent Iran‑driven volatility.
For traders, the setup is binary and brutally clear: lose the $2,170–$2,200 zone and that $1.8 billion long‑liquidation overhang becomes a real risk; reclaim and hold above $2,400 and shorts may be forced to chase into a low‑liquidity move toward the 200‑day EMA. In this kind of structure, execution and sizing matter more than conviction — especially with leverage stacked on both sides of the book. Readers can monitor intraday levels on crypto.news dashboards for Ethereum and Bitcoin, and for further context on how derivatives positioning has been shaping recent moves, see our coverage of why Bitcoin slipped under $66K earlier in the cycle, the latest ETF‑driven flows into BTC, and Michael Saylor’s ongoing treasury‑backed Bitcoin accumulation.
