I've been watching ETH sell pressure data recently, and it's pretty interesting. After the pullback, that wave of selling pressure is clearly converging and is almost fully digested.
Looking back at records, there's a pattern: during that drop to $1,300 in the middle of the year, sell pressure also gradually decreased, and then the price took off. On the other hand, when the price surged in September, sell pressure suddenly spiked—this kind of abnormal action is usually someone offloading at the top.
Normally, price increases and sell pressure decreases go hand in hand. If the price is rising but sell pressure is also increasing? Be careful, that's probably a signal to be the exit liquidity.
Right now, sell pressure has dropped sharply. Based on past experience, this is often when a decent rally occurs. But as always, data is just a reference—the market is always more complex than any model.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ConfusedWhale
· 12-06 10:30
The selling pressure has almost been digested; looks like we're about to take off this round.
---
Those who sold at the high in September must be feeling pretty bad right now, haha.
---
The data looks great, but I'm just worried it's another fake breakout.
---
Judging by this trend, ETH does have the foundation for a rally, but who knows.
---
The key is whether there will be another dump later; otherwise, it could really take off.
---
Last year around this time, we analyzed it the same way, then it plunged. So, better stay cautious.
---
I've seen this "selling pressure easing" thing too many times. Every time people say it's about to take off, but the results are mixed.
View OriginalReply0
Deconstructionist
· 12-05 15:06
I've heard the logic of "selling pressure is easing" too many times, yet it keeps getting proven wrong over and over again.
View OriginalReply0
BoredWatcher
· 12-05 12:00
The selling pressure has been fully absorbed; according to the usual pattern, is it time for another rally? Will history repeat itself?
View OriginalReply0
SchrodingersPaper
· 12-05 12:00
Damn, the "sell pressure absorption" theory is back again. Last time I listened to this analysis, I got completely wrecked.
View OriginalReply0
SmartContractWorker
· 12-05 11:57
I've seen this signal of selling pressure converging a few times before; history does repeat itself.
Let's wait and see if the price can rise as expected. Anyway, the data is what it is, and the market will do whatever it wants.
As for the so-called patterns, we got slapped in the face last September, so we still need to be careful about getting caught holding the bag.
View OriginalReply0
MetaverseVagabond
· 12-05 11:49
The selling pressure has been fully absorbed. This wave does feel a bit like the rhythm from mid-year. Get ready.
View OriginalReply0
MetaverseLandlord
· 12-05 11:43
The selling pressure got absorbed this quickly? Feels like it’s not that simple...
---
I remember the $1,300 move too, but this time the rebound doesn’t feel as strong.
---
When the price surges, the selling pressure actually increases. I’m just wondering who’s taking the other side of these trades.
---
Data is just for reference. When it comes down to the crucial moment, you still have to watch how the whales move.
---
History repeating itself? The problem is, every time it repeats, there’s some new twist. Gotta be careful not to fall into a trap.
---
I’ve heard this pump expectation several times before, but most of the time it turns out to be a false alarm.
#比特币对比代币化黄金 Observation on December 5, 2026
I've been watching ETH sell pressure data recently, and it's pretty interesting. After the pullback, that wave of selling pressure is clearly converging and is almost fully digested.
Looking back at records, there's a pattern: during that drop to $1,300 in the middle of the year, sell pressure also gradually decreased, and then the price took off. On the other hand, when the price surged in September, sell pressure suddenly spiked—this kind of abnormal action is usually someone offloading at the top.
Normally, price increases and sell pressure decreases go hand in hand. If the price is rising but sell pressure is also increasing? Be careful, that's probably a signal to be the exit liquidity.
Right now, sell pressure has dropped sharply. Based on past experience, this is often when a decent rally occurs. But as always, data is just a reference—the market is always more complex than any model.