Ethereum Selling Pressure Will Be Low After Shanghai Upgrade, Here’s Why
02 March 2023 - 09:00PM
NEWSBTC
The Ethereum Shanghai hard fork is just around the corner and is
expected to be activated on the mainnet sometime in March 2023.
While the network will hereby take another significant milestone,
investors are looking anxiously at the upgrade as it could bring
massive selling pressure. But on-chain data platform CryptoQuant
published an in-depth analysis today that suggests there are two
good reasons why selling pressure on Ether (ETH) will remain low
even after the Shanghai upgrade. Ethereum Shanghai Hard Fork Does
Not Threaten Price Currently, there are 17.065 million ETH staked
in the deposit contract, which is 14.12% of the total supply. The
fear among investors is that there could be a massive dump in the
Ethereum price when a majority of ETH becomes available for the
first time in over two years. However, this concern is unfounded
for two reasons: First, there is an exit queue, as Ethereum’s exit
period is dynamic and not static like other proof of stake
networks, meaning that not all ETH can be dumped all at once but
over a long period of time, as NewsBTC reported. On the other hand,
a majority of ETH stakers would have to exit their positions, an
assumption that is unlikely, according to CryptoQuant. In its
report, the analysis firm concludes that selling pressure for ETH
will remain low after the Shanghai upgrade. Related Reading:
Ethereum Price Topside Bias Vulnerable If It Continues To Struggle
Below $1,700 This is the conclusion of CryptoQuant after analyzing
the profits and losses of ETH stakers. The company has found two
arguments for this: 60% of the staked ETH are in loss, and the
depositors of the largest staking pool are also in loss: 1-
Currently, 60% of staked ETH is at a loss, representing 10.3
million ETH. 2- The largest staking pool (Lido) holds almost 30% of
all staked ETH at an average loss of nearly $1,000. The staked ETH
has an average loss of 24%. The analytics firm backs its theory by
saying that selling pressure usually occurs when participants make
extreme profits, which is not currently the case with the staked
ETH. “Additionally, the most profitable staked ETH was staked less
than a year ago and has not seen significant profit-taking events
in the past,” CryptoQuant says. Dynamic Exit Queue Prevents Mass
Exodus Rich Falk-Wallace, CEO of research firm Arcana and former
portfolio manager at Citadel, agrees with CryptoQuant’s analysis
but took the other analytical approach. Related Reading: Is
Ethereum Following A Deadly Nasdaq Dot Com Fractal? In a worst-case
scenario presented Tuesday, the analyst projects that it would take
more than two years for the number of validators to drop from the
current 536,000 to 100,000 if the maximum validators churn occurs.
If this scenario were to happen, Falk-Wallace estimates that
selling pressure could be about 6% of daily volume (0.2% of total
ETH) in the first three days, 1% for the next six months, and 0.3%
over an 18-month period. Is the Shanghai Upgrade to Ethereum a
major price risk? One table lays out the worst case scenario. In
the worst case scenario: 6% of daily volume (0.2% of total ETH) for
the first 3 days. 1% for the next 6 months. 0.3% for the next 18
months. pic.twitter.com/8hIVzMLSSu — Rich Falk-Wallace
(@rfw_arcana) February 28, 2023 At press time, the Ethereum (ETH)
price was trading at $1,641. On the upside, $1,700 remains the main
resistance, while $1,560 is the line that the bulls need to defend.
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