According to the CryptoQuant chart, Ethereum reserves on Binance have fallen to around 3.7 million ETH, marking their lowest level since 2024.
This decline has been steady rather than abrupt, suggesting a sustained shift in how ETH holders are positioning their coins.
Exchange reserves reflect how much ETH is readily available for spot selling.
When balances on a major exchange like Binance trend lower, it usually means coins are being withdrawn to private wallets or moved into on-chain uses rather than kept liquid for trading. In practical terms, this reduces immediate sell-side supply.
The chart shows that this reduction in reserves has continued even as ETH’s price has weakened into the $2,000–$2,100 range, indicating that withdrawals are not driven by short-term price spikes, but by longer-term positioning.
Historically, declining exchange reserves during periods of price stress often signal that selling pressure is being absorbed rather than accelerating. Instead of depositing ETH to sell into weakness, holders appear to be doing the opposite, removing ETH from exchanges.
This behavior tends to align with phases where the market transitions from active distribution to supply tightening, even if prices remain volatile in the short term.
From a market-structure perspective, the current reserve level suggests:
While this does not guarantee a price reversal, it points to a more constrained supply environment compared to earlier phases of the cycle.
Ethereum reserves on Binance reaching their lowest level since 2024 highlight a meaningful shift in holder behavior. Even amid price weakness, ETH is steadily leaving exchanges, signaling reduced sell pressure and a potential foundation for stabilization once broader market conditions improve.
The post Ethereum Supply on Binance Hits Two-Year Low as Coins Leave Exchanges appeared first on ETHNews.


