How capital flows between L1s is often the clearest signal of whether the market is healthy or in trouble.
The logic is simple: even in a risk-averse environment, if you see strong capital movements in key sectors, it is a sign that the underlying fundamentals of the network are intact.
This shows that users are actively participating, smart contracts continue to execute, and liquidity continues to flow through the network.
Stablecoins are the perfect lens for this. From a technical perspective, strong inflows into stablecoins are a direct sign that investors are looking for opportunities and not running for the exit. Right now, Ethereum (ETH) is showing this playbook in action in real time.


As the chart shows, ETH stablecoin flows are moving in step with ETH reserves falling.
On Binance, Ethereum reserves fell to 3.3 million ETH, falling below the previous lows of February 2024 (3.53 million) and August 2024 (3.49 million).
Simply put, less ETH on exchanges means more ETH is taken off-chain, creating a real-time supply squeeze.
The picture becomes even more interesting when looking at stablecoin activity. Ethereum stablecoin balances continue to grow: USDT reserves increased from $35 billion in March to $38 billion in April, while USDC increased from $4.6 billion in February to $6.6 billion in April.
Add to this the decline in ETH reserves, and the trend becomes clear: investors are piling up ETH while leaving more stablecoins behind. Sentiment-wise, this shows a growing appetite for risk, a divergence AMBCrypto believes could pave the way for Ethereum’s second-quarter rally.
Ethereum’s next move depends on how investors’ risk appetite evolves
Strong stablecoin flows give an L1 a real advantage technically, and the reasons are simple.
When an L1 holds a significant share of the stablecoin supply, Ethereum, for example, still holds around 65%, it is a direct signal that liquidity is where it can be actively used.
Notably, the adoption of AI on the network is a great example of this in action: it shows capital moving and driving true on-chain usage.
However, beyond the technical advantage, Ethereum’s current setup also offers a psychological advantage.
As previously noted, the increase in stablecoin reserves and the decline in ETH reserves show that investors are not fleeing to safety. Instead, they chase risk, even in a highly volatile macroeconomic environment.


Seen in this light, the recent billion-dollar Ethereum derivatives sales volume starts to make sense.
As the chart shows, ETH takers’ sales volume spiked, causing a 4-5% decline. Simply put, these spikes indicate aggressive deleveraging, which in a risk-free market could trigger massive sell-offs.
But even with the decline, ETH remained strong at the $2,000 support level, making this move more like a healthy reset than a crash.
In this configuration, stablecoins clearly emerge as a key metric for the next stage of Ethereum. From both a technical and psychological perspective, these flows set the tone for ETH’s Q2 rally, which is starting to look increasingly bullish.
Final summary
- Declining ETH reserves and increasing stablecoin flows show investors are piling up ETH while keeping stablecoins on the sidelines, highlighting the growing appetite for risk.
- Strong stablecoin flows, combined with AI adoption, give ETH both a technical and psychological advantage for its Q2 rally.


