Ethereum is sitting near $2,374 on May 5, 2026, after one of those sessions where the chart tells a pretty clear story once you zoom out. Big drop early, choppy grind in the middle, then a cleaner move higher once Asia opened. Not pretty, but buyers did show up.
ETH opened the 24-hour window at $2,363.5 and immediately started leaking. By the time sellers were done, price had touched $2,310, about $53 lower than where it started. From there it was slow going for most of the day.
Worth walking through the chart in order, because the structure matters here.
The drop to $2,310 happened fast, within the first couple hours of the session. That kind of speed usually means stop hunts or a liquidation flush rather than genuine distribution. After that, ETH spent most of the afternoon and evening in a tight range between $2,330 and $2,360, red on the chart, but not falling further.
Around 4:00 AM on May 5, something shifted. Volume came in, ETH cleared back above the $2,363 open, and price ran up to a session high near $2,393. It has since pulled back to $2,374, which puts it just a hair above the open. Not a convincing breakout, but not a failure either.
ETH/USD 24H chart showing the drop from $2,363 to a low near $2,310, followed by a recovery above the open by May 5 morning. Source: CoinMarketCap.
At current prices, $2,363 is what everything hinges on. ETH is above it, barely. A 4H close that stays above that level keeps the door open to another run at $2,393, and beyond that $2,420 is where several analysts have been watching for a weekly close confirmation.
Lose $2,363 again on a 4H close and the picture gets messier. $2,330 to $2,340 is the next floor worth watching. Below that and you are back talking about $2,310, which was already tested once today. A daily close under $2,300 would be a problem. That would hand the chart back to sellers pretty decisively.
ETH spot ETF flows have been rough. Four straight days of outflows heading into this week, which is not a small thing. Outflows do not cause crashes on their own, but they signal that institutions are not buying the dip yet. Until that flips, every bounce in ETH carries the risk of running out of fuel before it gets anywhere meaningful.
On the macro side, ETH has been basically glued to Bitcoin and the broader risk trade. BTC clearing $80,000 overnight gave ETH a lift, and that is probably why the 4:00 AM move happened when it did. As long as BTC holds that level, ETH has a decent floor underneath it. A BTC pullback would drag ETH right along with it.
Support: $2,363 (pivot) / $2,330-$2,340 / $2,300
Resistance: $2,393 (24H high) / $2,420 / $2,500
ETH got hit to $2,310 early in the session, spent hours going nowhere, then finally reclaimed its opening price from the 4:00 AM move. It is not an exciting setup, but it is better than it looked at midday.
$2,363 is the number. Hold it into the daily close and $2,393 and $2,420 are back on the table. Drop back below it and the session high near $2,393 starts looking like a local top rather than a stepping stone.
Neutral for now, leaning slightly positive if BTC can stay above $80K through the day.

