Recently, leverage has been aggressively flushed out of Ethereum’s market structure.
According to a report shared by CryptoQuant, Ethereum open interest has fallen more than 66% since its last all-time high. The total notional value of futures contracts dropped from $33.3 billion to $11.4 billion, effectively cutting the market’s leveraged exposure by two-thirds.
This is not a mild cooldown. It is a structural reset.
The contraction has been widespread across major exchanges:
Despite this decline, Binance remains the dominant venue, controlling more than 35% of Ethereum open interest among major centralized exchanges. Gate.io follows with 23.4%, while Bybit accounts for 14.4%.
The magnitude of the decline reflects three overlapping pressures:
This combination accelerated the unwind.
Such a sharp collapse in open interest signals stress in the derivatives ecosystem. Leverage amplified both the upside during the rally and the downside during the correction. Now, that excess leverage is being purged.
From a structural perspective, deleveraging is not inherently bearish long term. Historically, deep resets in open interest can help stabilize markets by removing fragile positions and reducing forced selling risk.
However, in the short term, this environment reflects clear risk aversion. Traders are cautious. Capital is defensive. Confidence has not yet returned.
Until sentiment improves and leverage begins rebuilding organically, derivatives are likely to remain a sensitive pressure point for Ethereum’s price action.
For now, the message from the data is simple: leverage has exited the system — and the market is still searching for equilibrium.
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