Key Takeaways
Validator exits now exceed 694k ETH, while over 6 million ETH is permanently removed from supply via burns and lost keys, tightening the float just as ETH eyes a breakout.
Ethereum [ETH] is retesting a key resistance level. It is the same zone that triggered an 8.5% flush to $3,531 last week.
Under the hood, staking flows are showing signs of stress. The Validator Exit Queue has swelled to 694,106 ETH, while entry demand trails behind, resulting in a net staking outflow of 473,151 ETH.
Meanwhile, Open Interest is ticking higher, with Binance’s OI pushing back up to $15 billion.
With stakes this high, is ETH about to replay last week’s flush, or does this become the backdrop for a supply squeeze toward the $4,000 handle?
ETH at resistance with no panic in sight
Technically, Ethereum’s 1D chart showed price retesting the $3,800 resistance. In fact, it’s the same level that triggered a rejection last week after a sharp 50% rally off the June lows.
Despite the pullback, the structure held. There were no signs of panic or forced selling, suggesting investors didn’t flinch.
Why does this matter?
Because the move wasn’t about ETH weakness. Instead, it was a dominance-driven rotation.
BTC.D bounced 2.5% off its 60.43% local low, flipping the ETH/BTC ratio back into a downtrend and compressing ETH.D back to 11.30%.


Source: TradingView (ETH.D)
Therefore, unless this technical divergence re-emerges, ETH remains technically positioned to reclaim the $3,800 supply zone. In turn, flipping it into a breakout base for a bullish expansion toward cycle highs.
However, if Bitcoin [BTC] Dominance surges again, capital rotation might resume. That would test ETH’s relative strength—and possibly trigger a deeper pullback.
Locked ETH + rising exits = supply crunch?
No doubt, on the demand side, Ethereum continued to show strong tailwinds. Investor conviction remains intact, with positioning holding firm through local volatility.
But the implications go beyond short-term price action. Based on smart contract audits, over 913,000 ETH is permanently inaccessible, totaling $3.43 billion in value.
This includes funds lost in multi-sig freezes, burned wallets, contract bugs, and even typo errors.
In fact, when combined with 5.3 million ETH burned via EIP‑1559, more than 5% of Ethereum’s total issuance has been effectively removed from circulation, reinforcing Ethereum’s scarcity narrative.


Source: X
Now combine that with rising staking exits (+473k ETH), a 12-day Validator Exit Queue, and $50 billion in Open Interest. Circulating supply available for futures or margin trades is thinning fast.
So if dominance rotation cools and demand sticks around, Ethereum flipping $3,800 could be more than a bounce, it could be the start of something much bigger.