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Ethereum Taker Buy-Sell Ratio Plummets to Critical Lows—Here’s What Happened Last Time

Ethereum Taker Buy-Sell Ratio Plummets to Critical Lows—Here’s What Happened Last Time

Author:
Newsbtc
Published:
2025-09-21 14:00:48
19
1

Ethereum's taker buy-sell ratio just hit rock bottom—and history suggests turbulence ahead.

Market mechanics unravel

The ratio measures aggressive buyers versus sellers. When it tanks, it signals overwhelming selling pressure. Traders pile into shorts. Liquidity evaporates. The last time this happened? Ethereum bled out for weeks before finding a bottom.

Institutional fingerprints everywhere

Whales aren't just watching—they're orchestrating this move. They dump positions, trigger stop losses, then scoop up cheap ETH. Rinse and repeat. Classic accumulation strategy while retail panics.

DeFi domino effect

Low ratios hammer lending protocols. Collateral gets liquidated. Yield farms implode. The entire ecosystem feels the squeeze—because everything's leveraged to ETH's hips.

Silver lining for degens

Extreme ratios often mark local bottoms. Contrarians load up here. They bet against the crowd—and usually win once the leverage flushes out.

Finance never changes—only the suckers do. The house always wins, whether it's Wall Street or a decentralized casino.

ETH Price At Risk Of Return To $1,500?

In a recent post on the social media platform X, pseudonymous crypto analyst Darkfost revealed that the Ethereum investors might be flooding out of the market at the moment. This observation is based on the recent downturn in the ETH Taker Buy-Sell Ratio on the world’s largest crypto exchange by trading volume.

The Taker Buy-Sell Ratio is an on-chain indicator that compares the proportion of the taker buy volumes to the taker sell volumes on crypto exchanges. When the value of this metric is greater than one, it signals that the taker buy volume is higher than the taker sell volume on a crypto exchange. This trend typically points to the willingness of more traders to purchase coins at a higher value on the trading platform.

Meanwhile, a less-than-one value for the Taker Buy-Sell Ratio typically means that the taker sell volume is higher than the taker buy volume on the exchange. Ultimately, this low value indicates that more sellers are offloading their assets at a lower price, precipitating bearish pressure in the market.

According to data from CryptoQuant, the Ethereum Taker Buy-Sell Ratio fell below the 1 threshold to around 0.87 on Friday, September 19. This latest decline marked the third time this metric has fallen this low so far in 2025.

Ethereum

As observed in the above chart, Darkfost noted that the indicator fell as low as 0.85 in January and February 2025. This ratio decline coincided with the bearish trend, during which the price of Ethereum fell to around the $1,500 region.

As of the time of publishing their post on X, Darkfost revealed that the 7-day average of the Taker Buy-Sell Ratio stood at 0.93, which is still short of the 1 threshold. The on-chain analyst concluded that while the ethereum price is looking to break above the $5,000 milestone, more investors seem to be increasingly betting against the altcoin’s rally. 

Although it is highly unlikely to see a downturn similar to the one in 2025’s first quarter, the latest on-chain events suggest that the price of ETH could still face some bearish pressure in the coming weeks.

Ethereum Price At A Glance

As of this writing, the price of ETH stands at around $4,475, reflecting a mere 0.4% leap in the past 24 hours.

Ethereum

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