Journalist
Posted: December 23, 2025
Ethereum [ETH] is in the spotlight, but not for good reasons. After weeks of inflows, $555 million exited ETH-linked products last week. What’s more? Despite exchange balances being at their lowest since 2016, Ethereum continues to underperform Bitcoin [BTC].
The much-anticipated Ethereum-led altseason of 2026 looks unlikely for now.
The line of fire
Ethereum bore the brunt of last week’s risk-off move, leading digital asset fund outflows with a mammoth $555 million exit. This is the largest among major tokens.
According to CoinShares data, this was the first weekly withdrawal in a month. The report cites delays to the U.S. Clarity Act at a critical moment for ETH as a possible reason.
Source: CoinShares
The reaction was heavily U.S.-centric, with nearly all outflows originating from American investors; it seems like Ethereum’s outlook is hugely tied to regulations.
While Bitcoin saw withdrawals too, ETH’s positioning made it vulnerable. As the asset with the most to gain (or lose) from clearer rules, ETH became the market’s pressure point.
With that being said, total year-to-date inflows remain well above last year’s levels.
Read between the lines
At first glance, Ethereum’s on-exchange supply looks pretty good. ETH held on exchanges has dropped to its lowest level since 2016, so there’s long-term holding and little pressure to sell. But that’s not all.
Source: CryptoQuant
Despite this, Ethereum continues to lag behind BTC. Data from Binance showed that the ETH-BTC composite indicator was at around -0.46, as of writing, firmly below zero.
This has so far meant that Bitcoin still leads both liquidity and risk appetite. The setup limits Ethereum’s ability to lead the wider market.
Source: CryptoQuant
While ETH remains more volatile than BTC, its relative volatility has been trending lower. Investors are not yet willing to take on higher risk.
Source: CryptoQuant
Until Ethereum starts outperforming Bitcoin decisively, the conditions needed for an ETH-led altseason remain unconfirmed.
Fragile short-term look
Traders’ lack of confidence is evident on the charts. In the short term, Ethereum remains trapped in a narrow range, hovering just below the $3,000 level at press time.
At press time, the price hovered near the midpoint of the Bollinger Bands, reflecting indecision and limited directional momentum.
Source: TradingView
The RSI showed weak bullish strength, while the MACD remained flat with no clear crossover; this further proved the absence of a good pace.
Unless ETH can reclaim the upper Bollinger Band near $3,300, the path of least resistance remains sideways. Downside risks are still in play if sentiment worsens.
Final Thoughts
Ethereum saw $555M exit last week, underperforming Bitcoin and keeping an ETH-led altseason out of reach.
Exchange balances hit a 7-year low, but weak risk appetite limits short-term upside for ETH.
Next: Gold hits $4,420 ATH – What it means for Bitcoin’s long-term appeal
