Ethereum (ETH) price is holding above the $2,100 level as of Wednesday, May 21, 2026, despite enduring seven consecutive days of net outflows from US-based spot Ethereum exchange-traded funds (ETFs). The second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap has faced consistent selling pressure, trading near $2,130 on Wednesday, even as institutional interest in the United States continues to cool.
Confirming the sustained exodus, data from SoSoValue indicates that spot Ethereum ETFs saw a net outflow of $28.1 million on Wednesday. This follows a difficult Tuesday session where CoinGlass reported $61.7 million in outflows, while separate figures from SoSoValue placed that day’s exit at $62.3 million. The streak of divestment was particularly heavy on Monday, May 19, when investors pulled $85.6 million from these products.
The Ethereum support analysis shows that bulls are actively defending the $2,108 mark. While ETH managed a slight 0.40% uptick late Wednesday to reach $2,137.65, the token remains down approximately 8% over the last seven days. Market participants are watching whether this floor can withstand broader macroeconomic headwinds, including soaring inflation and rising US Treasury yields.
Institutional sentiment and the Coinbase Premium Index
A primary factor weighinig on price action is the deepening negative reading of the Coinbase Premium Index. This index measures the price gap between Coinbase and other global exchanges; a negative value suggests that US-based institutional buyers are significantly less active than international traders. This downward trend has been persistent since late April, as capital increasingly favors Bitcoin over Ethereum.
The network is also grappling with a sharp reduction in decentralized finance (DeFi) activity. On-chain data reveals that the total value locked (TVL) in Ethereum protocols has eroded by more than $17 billion since late March. Investor confidence was further shaken by recent protocol hacks, specifically those affecting Kelp DAO and Drift Protocol, which resulted in a tangible loss of TVL over the past few days.
Furthermore, the Ethereum Foundation has come under community fire regarding its transparency and governance. A series of high-profile leadership departures has triggered heightened scrutiny of the organization at a time when the Ethereum recovery outlook appears technically challenged. Internal shifts at the Foundation coincide with a period where institutional fund managers have largely prioritized Bitcoin ETFs since the market bottomed in February.
Technical indicators and overhead supply zones
From a technical perspective, Ethereum price is currently trading below its 20-, 50-, and 100-day Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs). These averages are tightly clustered between $2,234 and $2,328, creating a heavy overhead supply zone. Any potential rally will likely face significant resistance within this range as sellers look to exit positions at higher levels.
Crypto analyst Ted Pillows noted on X that ETH is currently “attempting to break above the $2,150 level.” Pillows suggested that “a successful reclaim of that zone could push ETH toward $2,250,” which sits near the 50-day EMA of $2,247. However, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) is currently hovering around 37, signaling that while the asset is nearing oversold territory, strong buying momentum has yet to return.
Other indicators suggest the downside pressure may persist. The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) remains negative, and the 4-hour RSI stands at a modest 42. While the Stochastic Oscillator hints that the downward momentum could begin to slow, the path of least resistance has remained lower throughout the week as the market digests the influx of spot ETF exits.
Futures activity provides a minor buffer
Despite the bearish spot and ETF data, the futures market is showing some signs of resilience. Futures open interest has recovered by nearly 500,000 ETH since Monday, currently totaling $32.2 billion. This is up from the $30.8 billion recorded on Tuesday, according to CoinGlass. Positive funding rates of 0.0076% suggest that retail participation is growing, even as institutional flows remain negative.
While some traders are shifting focus—often as altcoin demand shifts toward new tokens during presale phases—Ethereum’s core support at $2,067 remains a critical level for bulls to protect. If outflows from the US ETFs continue into the weekend, the market will look to these psychological floors to prevent a deeper slide toward the $2,000 mark.
Success for Ethereum in the coming sessions depends on reclaiming immediate resistance at $2,150 and eventually the $2,247 region. For now, the cooling demand from US institutions and the multi-day outflow streak keep the short-term outlook cautious. Investors will be monitoring the next set of SoSoValue and CoinGlass reports to see if the institutional selling finally reaches an exhaustion point.
