Ethereum is trading around $2,060, consolidating after rebounding from recent lows near $1,850–$1,880.
The 1-hour structure shows a recovery attempt into resistance rather than a confirmed breakout, with price compressing beneath the $2,080–$2,120 region.
While near-term expectations point toward range-bound movement, broader projections for 2026 remain constructive, driven by institutional positioning, regulatory clarity, and network upgrades.
On the 1-hour ETH/USDT chart, price is holding above the psychological $2,000 level but remains capped below the recent swing highs.
Volume expanded during the drop into the $1,840 region and normalized during the recovery, suggesting reactive buying rather than aggressive continuation. For bullish confirmation, Ethereum would need sustained acceptance above the $2,000–$2,026 zone, often associated with the 200-day EMA region in broader trend analysis.
Forecasts for late February 2026 cluster between $1,945 and $2,500, reflecting expectations of sideways volatility within defined structural levels.
For March 2026, some projections anticipate a recovery toward $2,560–$3,150 if network activity and trading participation increase.
Despite short-term consolidation, institutional analysts maintain a constructive longer-term view.
Standard Chartered recently revised its end-2026 target to $7,500, down from a previous $12,000 projection. The adjustment reflects recalibrated market multiples rather than a change in thesis, with emphasis placed on Ethereum’s role in tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) and stablecoins.
The broader consensus range among major institutions sits between $5,000 and $7,500 by year-end 2026.
More aggressive models, including commentary from Arthur Hayes, suggest ETH could reach $10,000–$20,000before the end of the current cycle if ETF inflows accelerate and liquidity conditions improve.
Illustrative analyst projections indicate potential ranges as follows:
These estimates assume improving network activity and sustained capital inflows.
“Project Crypto,” along with coordinated efforts between the SEC and CFTC, is expected to reduce regulatory uncertainty around Ethereum-based products. A clearer framework may encourage expanded institutional participation.
Companies such as Bitmine have continued accumulating ETH during the early-2026 pullback, reportedly holding over 4.3 million ETH, representing approximately 3.58% of total supply.
The anticipated Fusaka upgrade aims to increase throughput and reduce transaction costs, reinforcing Ethereum’s positioning as a primary settlement layer for stablecoins and tokenized assets.
In the immediate term, Ethereum appears range-bound between $1,900 and $2,200, with $2,000 acting as the key structural pivot. A decisive move above resistance would strengthen recovery momentum, while failure to hold $1,900 would reintroduce downside risk toward $1,850.
Longer-term projections remain constructive, but confirmation will depend on institutional flows, regulatory developments, and sustained network growth rather than short-term price volatility alone.
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