Q2 has been broadly bullish across both quarterly and monthly performance. However, when looking specifically at Ethereum [ETH], its 10.48% Q2 gain appears strong at first glance. On closer inspection, ETH’s April performance was only 7.3%, which is roughly 1.7x lower than Bitcoin’s [BTC] ROI. May has continued a similar trend, with ETH’s gains so far about 2x smaller than Bitcoin’s, raising questions about Ethereum’s ability to outperform Bitcoin in Q2. Against this backdrop, Ethereum flows on Binance are becoming increasingly important. As shown in the chart below, early May has seen a rise in on-chain activity, particularly in exchange inflows, with Binance recording multiple hourly spikes in Ethereum deposits. To put this into perspective, the largest inflow events since March include the 6th of May (216,152 ETH, $511 million), the 8th of May (98,552 ETH, $224 million), and the 9th of May (125,146 ETH, $288 million). The key takeaway? Over the same period, ETH reserves on Binance have continued to trend higher, now reaching 3.62 million ETH, which is roughly 24.6% of total ETH held across exchanges. Taken together, rising ETH inflows and increasing reserves suggest sustained distribution pressure, which may be contributing to Ethereum’s ongoing consolidation phase. Notably, recent whale activity reinforces this trend. According to Lookonchain, a whale recently deposited another 108,169 ETH into Binance, while Arkham data shows another whale transferring around $180 million worth of ETH to Binance. In essence, this reflects continued large-holder inflows to exchanges, adding to near-term supply pressure. Naturally, this raises the question: Is Ethereum’s Q2 rally against Bitcoin now at risk? Whale shorts align with Ethereum’s liquidity sweep setup A key risk management approach for traders is timing market actions effectively. In this context, whale positioning on Bitfinex, with short exposure in Ethereum surging, is starting to carry more significance. More importantly, this positioning does not appear random. Instead, it suggests a more strategic setup, potentially aimed at trapping late longs and profiting from a downside move as key liquidity pockets are targeted and flushed. Interestingly, Ethereum’s liquidation heatmap helps clarify this structure. As shown in the chart below, ETH currently has two notable liquidity clusters: on the upside, there is a liquidity zone around the $2,400-$2,500 range. On the downside, there is a liquidity zone around the $2,180-$2,260 range. Against this setup, Ethereum’s Binance inflows carry real weight. The logic is simple: With distribution pressure rising and bid support relatively weak, ETH’s supply dynamics appear to be tilting in favor of the bears. In this context, increasing short positioning begins to make more sense, suggesting Ethereum’s current consolidation could be forming into a potential bull trap. If this trend continues, Ethereum’s Q2 positioning against Bitcoin could weaken further, making Binance ETH flows a key metric to watch this cycle. Final Summary Rising ETH inflows on Binance, higher reserves, and whale deposits suggest ongoing distribution pressure and weak bid support during consolidation. Increasing short positioning and clustered liquidity zones point to a potential downside sweep, putting Ethereum's Q2 performance vs. Bitcoin under pressure.
3.62M ETH hits Binance – Here’s why Ethereum’s Q2 rally looks weak
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