Ethereum’s market structure is tightening as staking activity continues to increase, gradually reducing the supply of liquidity available for trading.
With more than 32% of ETH now staked, a significant portion remains blocked, compressing the tradable float on exchanges. This change is important because it directly impacts market depth, thereby reducing order books over time.


As liquidity tightens, prices become more sensitive to inbound demand, allowing even moderate inflows to generate larger upward movements. However, this same situation introduces fragility, as lower liquidity reduces the market’s ability to absorb selling pressure.
If support weakens, downward movements can accelerate rapidly, reflecting a structure in which supply constraints amplify both upward and downward volatility.
Demand Structure Weakens as Perpetuals Drive Momentum
As staking continues to block supply, demand begins to show a different character, where derivatives take over instead of spot conviction.
Activity is moving quickly into leveraged markets, with perpetual volume reaching $34.74 billion, well above spot volume of $14.29 billion, showing traders prefer speed over stability.
However, Open Interest (OI) fell to around $31.18 billion, down 5.75%, suggesting that traders are not building sustainable positions but rotating exposure.
As a result, financing rates turned slightly negative, reflecting increasing selling pressure even as prices held steady. This creates a mixed structure, where some traders position themselves short while others look for short-term moves.
As a result, the price becomes more reactive than stable, implying that users face faster fluctuations, where gains can reverse quickly without strong spot demand to support them.
Shift in order flow signals buyers are regaining control
As derivatives continue to drive demand, order flow begins to explain why Ethereum has struggled to maintain its upside throughout the cycle.
Selling pressure remained persistent, with deeply negative net taker volume during major rallies, including around -$511 million above $4,000.
As the price moved closer to the high near $5,000, this pressure intensified further, reaching nearly -$568 million, showing that sellers actively responded to each breakout attempt.


This trend explains the repeated failure to maintain highs, as indebted sellers absorbed demand faster than it could grow.
However, the structure is now starting to change.
Since March, net buyer volume has turned positive at approximately +$102 million, suggesting buyers are finally absorbing the supply.
If this continues, prices could stabilize and rise, but failure would return the market to reactive, leverage-driven fluctuations.
Final summary
- Ethereum’s (ETH) supply squeeze tightens liquidity, increasing upside sensitivity, but thinner depth increases the risk of volatility in the event of demand shocks or selling pressures.
- Ethereum shows an early shift in demand as buyers absorb sales, but low spot conviction keeps prices responsive and dependent on sustained inflows.


