ETH USDT Technical Analysis
1597.77$
-9.67%
(24h)
Data as of
15m
1h
4h
1D
1W
Oscillators
Summary:
Neutral
Sell:
0
Neutral:
8
Buy:
1
| Oscillator | Trend | Parameter |
|---|---|---|
|
RSI (9)
RSI (9) – Relative Strength Index with a 9-candle period. Used to identify short-term overbought and oversold conditions, as well as early reversal signals over the last 9 candles.
Close
|
Neutral
|
51.38
30
70
|
|
RSI (14)
RSI (14) – Relative Strength Index with a 14-candle period. This is the standard period for RSI, used by most traders to identify medium-term overbought and oversold conditions, as well as potential reversal signals over the last 14 candles.
Close
|
Neutral
|
49.48
30
70
|
|
RSI (25)
RSI (25) – Relative Strength Index with a 25-candle period. Used to identify long-term overbought and oversold conditions, as well as potential reversal signals over the last 25 candles. Well-suited for analyzing sustained trends and filtering out false short-term signals.
Close
|
Neutral
|
45.44
30
70
|
|
ADX (14)
ADX (14) – Average Directional Index with a standard period of 14 candles. Measures trend strength, not its direction. Values above 40 indicate a strong trend, between 40 and 20 indicate a weak trend, and below 20 indicate no trend. Calculations are based on the last 14 candles.
Close
|
Rising
|
27.83
20
40
|
|
STOCH (%K)(5,3,3)
STOCH (%K) (5,3,3) – a stochastic oscillator with 5,3,3 settings. It shows the current price’s position relative to the price range over the selected period. It is used to identify overbought and oversold conditions, as well as potential trend reversal points. The values (5,3,3) denote the parameters: 5 – the %K calculation period, 3 – the %K smoothing period (the %D line), and 3 – the %D smoothing period.
Close
|
Neutral
|
58.68
20
80
|
|
MFI (14)
Money Flow Index (14) – a money flow index with a 14-period setting. It combines price and volume to assess the strength of capital inflows and outflows over the last 14 candles. It helps identify divergences and shows how actively money is “flowing into” (above 80 – overbought) or “flowing out of” (below 20 – oversold) the asset.
Close
|
Neutral
|
68.61
20
80
|
|
CCI (20)
CCI (20) – Commodity Channel Index with a 20-candle period. It measures the strength of price movement and the deviation of the price from the average value over the last 20 candles. It is used to identify overbought and oversold conditions, as well as potential trend reversal points. The -100 and +100 levels serve as key zones for signaling these conditions.
Close
|
Neutral
|
48.84
-100
100
|
|
Chaikin
money flow (20)
Chaikin Money Flow (20) – Chaikin Money Flow indicator with a 20-candle period. Shows the ratio of buying volume to selling volume. It is used to confirm trend strength and identify accumulation (buying) or distribution (selling) over the last 20 candles (typically days). It ranges from -1 to 1, where positive values indicate an inflow of money and negative values indicate an outflow.
Close
|
Buy
|
0.06
0
|
|
Williams %R (14)
Williams %R (14) – Williams’ %R indicator with a 14-candle period. Shows the current price’s position relative to the highest and lowest over a period of 14 candles. Used to identify overbought and oversold conditions, as well as potential reversal points and entry/exit points for trades.
Close
|
Neutral
|
-27.68
-80
-20
|
|
UO (7,14,28)
Ultimate Oscillator UO (7,14,28) – a composite oscillator with periods of 7, 14, and 28 candles. It combines short-term, medium-term, and long-term momentum for a more accurate assessment of the strength of the trend. It is used to identify divergences and confirm reversals. It is calculated across three time intervals simultaneously.
Close
|
Neutral
|
55.72
43
73
|
|
Squeeze
momentum indicator
Squeeze Momentum Indicator – a volatility and momentum squeeze indicator. It identifies moments when the market is in a phase of low volatility, which is often followed by major market movement. It is used to identify the start of momentum trends and breakout points.
Close
|
No Squeeze | - |
Moving Averages
Summary:
Neutral
Sell:
7
Neutral:
0
Buy:
5
| 20 | 50 | 100 | 200 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
sma
SMA – Simple Moving Average. Calculates the average price over a selected period. Used to determine trend direction, support and resistance levels, and to filter out market noise. Calculated as the average price over a specified number of candles.
Close
|
Growth | Drop | Drop | Drop |
ema
EMA – Exponential Moving Average. Shows the average price of an asset over a specific period, giving greater weight to recent price data, which makes it more sensitive to recent changes and better reflects the current trend than SMA does. It helps smooth out price fluctuations, identify market direction (bullish or bearish), and determine potential support and resistance levels.
Close
|
Growth | Drop | Drop | Drop |
hma
HMA – Hull Moving Average. A fast and smooth indicator designed to minimize the lag of traditional moving averages (SMA, EMA). It is used to more accurately and timely determine the trend direction and possible price reversal points. It is calculated based on a combination of weighted moving averages and special smoothing, which allows it to remain sensitive to market changes without an excessive number of false signals.
Close
|
Drop | Growth | Growth | Growth |
Pivot Points
| Points | Parameter |
|---|---|
| r3 | 1629.11 |
| r2 | 1619.68 |
| r1 | 1608.54 |
| p | 1599.11 |
| s1 | 1587.97 |
| s2 | 1578.54 |
| s3 | 1567.40 |
In addition to ETH’s technical analysis, pay special attention to the following metrics:
- ETH staking rate. The more ETH is locked in staking, the fewer coins are available for sale on the market. If demand remains the same or increases, while the number of available coins decreases, the price will rise. It is important to monitor the trends: an increase in the share of ETH in staking is a precursor to price growth, while a mass withdrawal from staking indicates a high probability of a price drop.
- ETH burning. Since August 2021, a portion of transaction fees within the blockchain has been burned (destroyed permanently). When blockchain activity is high and more ETH is burned than validators can issue, the number of coins decreases, and the price rises. During periods of low activity, the opposite occurs.
- TVL in DeFi on Ethereum. TVL shows how many dollars are locked in the smart contracts of DeFi protocols on Ethereum. A rise in TVL means that users trust the ecosystem and are holding capital within it—this affects the available supply of coins in circulation, indicates real demand, and pushes the price up. A drop in TVL, conversely, signals capital outflow and may foreshadow a price decline.
- Spot ETH ETFs. Capital flows in ETFs (inflows/outflows) have become one of the main short-term drivers of the ETH price. Sustained inflows mean that large players are accumulating ETH, and the price then goes up. Conversely, outflows cause the price to fall. It is especially important to track the medium-term dynamics of inflow/outflow volumes.
- Network activity: number of transactions and active addresses. The daily number of transactions and unique addresses reflects actual network usage and serves as an indicator of fundamental demand, which supports price growth. Additionally, high activity on the blockchain leads to an increase in total transaction fees. This indirectly reduces the supply of coins available for circulation and may exert additional upward pressure on the price. If the price rises amid declining activity, this signals that the growth is not supported by fundamental data.
- ETH/BTC ratio. This ratio shows the direction of capital flow: do investors prefer to invest in Bitcoin or in altcoins? This is one of the simplest and most useful indicators, helping to understand where money is currently flowing. ETH/BTC at a historical low + an upward reversal is almost a guarantee of the start of alt season.
- Blockchain updates. Every successful update strengthens confidence in Ethereum. Delays or issues with updates or their implementation can prompt traders to sell their coins. The main thing to watch here is the impact of updates on user experience and blockchain efficiency.
- Competition from Solana and other L1s. Solana, Sui, and other Layer 1 blockchains are actively taking market share from Ethereum in terms of users and developers. This is particularly relevant in the memecoin, NFT, and DeFi segments. If competitors’ ecosystems grow faster, capital flows from ETH into their ecosystems, which can lead to a price decline. Therefore, the dynamics of Ethereum’s market share relative to other L1s is an important indicator of long-term investment attractiveness.
- Macroeconomics and risk. ETH is sensitive to the Fed interest rates, inflation, and changes in monetary policy, especially in the U.S. When the Fed cuts rates, additional money enters the market. Historically, in such situations, risky assets (including ETH) rise. Geopolitical issues and tighter regulation, on the other hand, put downward pressure on cryptocurrency prices.