Post a Comment Print Share on Facebook
Featured China Ana Pontón Rock Sumar Peugeot

The premium for Ethereum futures drops to a seven-month low, as ETH tests $2,400 support

The price of Ethereum dropped 30% within two weeks and derivatives data suggests that pro traders are bearish despite Feb. 25's rally to $2,800.

- 29 reads.

The premium for Ethereum futures drops to a seven-month low, as ETH tests $2,400 support

The local high for Ether ( ETH) was $3,280 on February 10, marking a 51.5% improvement from Jan. 24, when it dropped to $2,160. This price was the lowest it had been in six months and partially explains why derivatives traders main sentiment gauge dropped to bearish levels.

The basis or annualized premium for Ether futures contracts was 2.5% on February 25, reflecting bearishness despite the 11% rise to $2,700. Investors are expressing doubts about the Ethereum network's transition to a Proof-of-Stake (PoS), mechanism.

Cointelegraph reports that the much-anticipated Sharding Upgrade, which will dramatically increase processing capability, should be in effect by late 2022 or early twenty23.

A longer-term view of Ether's performance is more appealing, as it currently stands at 45% below its $48,870 all-time peak.

In spite of the price correction, the Ethereum network's adjusted value locked (TVL), has remained at 42.8 million Ethereum.

The network's TVL rose by 16.5% in just three months. This is due to growth from nonfungible token and decentralized finance markets (DeFi).

Professional traders are feeling frustrated and anxious due to delays in network upgrades and worsening macro conditions. This sentiment is reflected in multiple derivatives metrics.

Futures on Ether hit their lowest level in seven years.

Due to the fixed settlement date and price differential from spot markets, retail traders tend not to trade quarterly futures. The greatest advantage of the contracts is their lack of fluctuating funding rates, which is why professional traders and arbitrage desks are so common.

Fixed-month contracts trade at a slightly higher premium than spot markets, because sellers are asking for more money to hold settlement longer. This is technically known as "contango", and it is not only for crypto markets.

In healthy markets, futures should trade at a premium of 5%-15% annually. As you can see, Ether's annualized Premium has fallen from 20% to 2.5% on Oct. 21.

The basis indicator is still positive but it has fallen to its lowest level in seven years. Bearish sentiment prevailed after the February 24 crash to $2300. Not even Feb. 25,'s 10% recovery was enough for it to turn the tables.

Data shows that there are no signs that bulls want to regain control. If that were true, Ether futures premiums would have been positive following a rally like this.