Ethereum is trading near $2,128 on May 20, 2026, down 7.55% on the week. Four consecutive losing weeks. ETH has underperformed Bitcoin every single one of them. This week it lost nearly 3 percentage points more than BTC. The gap is not closing.
The chart opened at $2,299.4, briefly touched $2,310 in the first hours, then sold off without pause. The worst session was May 17 to 18 when a vertical drop took ETH from $2,200 to a weekly low near $2,085. The partial recovery to $2,128 since then leaves ETH $28 above the $2,100 level that analysts have flagged as the last real floor before $1,900.
Twenty-eight dollars of cushion on a volatile asset in a bearish macro environment is not cushion. It is a test.
The first half of the week was a slow bleed. ETH dropped from $2,299 to around $2,200 between May 13 and 17 on the same mix of hot CPI data, rising Treasury yields, and fading regulatory optimism that hit BTC. ETH fell more than BTC during that phase, as it has every week this month.
The second leg was sharper. On May 17 to 18, Trump’s Iran warning sent Brent crude above $112 and triggered the broader $657 million liquidation cascade across crypto. ETH dropped nearly 5% in a single session, touching $2,085 at the low. That is the most violent single-day move ETH has printed since April.
Volume spiked on the drop and dried up on the bounce. That configuration has been consistent throughout ETH’s four-week decline. Sellers are doing real work. Buyers are covering positions, not building new ones.
ETH/USD 1W chart showing four consecutive losing weeks, the drop from $2,299 to $2,085, and the partial recovery to $2,128. Source: CoinMarketCap.
$2,100 is the level everything hinges on. ETH has not closed a weekly candle below it in 2026. The weekly close this Sunday will either confirm it as support or break it.
A weekly close above $2,100 keeps the floor intact and gives bulls something to work with next week. The first resistance on any bounce is $2,211, the 50-day EMA. Above that, $2,281 is the weekly open from last week. Neither is close from current price.
A daily close below $2,100 changes the conversation entirely. The next support is $1,900, which is where the double-top risk scenario that analysts have been warning about since April becomes live. Below $1,900, $1,650 is the 50% probability target if the monthly chart pattern plays out as modeled.
The 200-day MA at $2,335 is now $207 above current price. ETH has been below its 200-day MA for four consecutive weeks. That is the definition of a market that is losing rather than consolidating.
The pattern is structural and it keeps repeating. Every week ETH opens with a brief green attempt, then sells off harder than BTC and fails to recover as much.
The reason is consistent: ETH has a 0.78 correlation to the Nasdaq 100, higher leverage in derivatives markets, no corporate treasury buyer equivalent to Strategy’s systematic BTC accumulation, and the Ethereum Foundation’s recent unstaking of 21,271 ETH added supply exactly when demand was softening.
This week added a new factor. Iran launched “Hormuz Safe,” a Bitcoin-settled maritime insurance platform for ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz. The platform is denominated in Bitcoin, not Ethereum. It is a small story on its own, but it is one more instance of a real-world use case being built on BTC rather than ETH, which reinforces the narrative gap between the two assets in a risk-off environment.
Spot ETH ETF flows turned negative alongside the broader market. The $356 million in April inflows that ended a six-month outflow streak has not built into a sustained positive trend. Weekly outflows are running again.
Two things could reverse the pattern quickly.
An Iran de-escalation. If negotiations progress and Brent drops below $108, oil-driven inflation expectations ease, yields pull back, and risk appetite returns. ETH recovers faster than BTC in genuine risk-on environments because of the same high beta that hurts it in risk-off. The Iran discount on ETH is real and it unwinds fast.
Glamsterdam shipping. The upgrade that triples L1 throughput and introduces ePBS remains the fundamental catalyst ETH is waiting on. If a testnet date is confirmed with a mainnet target, the price will react before the upgrade arrives. A concrete timeline announcement would be the first independent ETH catalyst of 2026 that is not tied to macro conditions.
PCE data this week is the next macro trigger. Soft print eases rate hike fears and gives risk assets room. Hot print adds another leg to the tightening narrative.
Support: $2,100 / $1,900 / $1,650 Resistance: $2,211 (50-day EMA) / $2,281 / $2,335 (200-day MA)
Four losing weeks. Down 7.55% this week alone. ETH is holding $2,100 by $28 heading into the weekly close.
Hold it and the structure is damaged but intact. Lose it on a weekly close and $1,900 is the next serious conversation. The 200-day MA is $207 away. Glamsterdam is the only catalyst that changes the fundamental picture.
Bearish short-term. The chart is telling the same story it has told for a month.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.


