Ethereum has cratered over 40% from its August 2025 all-time high near $4,950, sinking to around $2,950 in the first week of December. The drop has been sharper and faster than Bitcoin’s 30% decline, dragging ETH back to levels last seen in early summer and wiping out most of the gains accumulated since the March lows.
The sell-off is classic risk-off behavior. As global macro conditions soured—fading hopes for aggressive Fed rate cuts, renewed U.S.-China trade tensions, and rising bond yields—speculative capital fled high-beta assets. Altcoins felt the pain first and hardest. Bitcoin dominance climbed back above 58%, with money rotating into BTC as the only perceived “safe” crypto play. Ethereum’s ETH/BTC ratio has collapsed to its lowest level ever, reflecting widespread de-risking across the altcoin complex.
Leveraged positions added fuel to the fire. Hundreds of millions in ETH perpetual futures were liquidated in a single day as price sliced through key support zones, amplifying the downside momentum in an already thin weekend market.
Yet beneath the price carnage, Ethereum’s core fundamentals remain remarkably resilient. The network still commands nearly 60% of all value locked in DeFi, with total TVL holding steady above $69 billion. Layer-2 ecosystems continue to expand, daily active addresses remain elevated compared to previous bear phases, and recent protocol upgrades have slashed transaction costs by another 40-60%. On-chain utility is intact; it’s the speculative premium that has been stripped away.
For now, Ethereum remains tethered to Bitcoin’s fate. With correlation coefficients hovering near 0.95, any meaningful recovery will require BTC to stabilize and macro conditions to ease. Without an independent catalyst—such as staking approval for U.S. ETH ETFs or a surprise Fed pivot—ETH is likely to keep trading as a leveraged play on broader risk sentiment.
Short-term technicals look grim: a potential death cross is forming, and a break below $2,800 could open the path toward $2,200–$2,500. Longer-term bulls point to whale accumulation on the dip and historical post-halving patterns that eventually favor recovery.
One thing is clear—this is not an Ethereum-specific crisis; it’s a market-wide de-risking event. Until global liquidity conditions improve, ETH will rise and fall with Bitcoin and the rest of the high-beta pack.






