Ethereum is trading near $2,304 on May 13, 2026, heading into the weekly close down 3% on the week. The CoinMarketCap chart shows a clean, one-directional week: opened at $2,370.5, hit $2,425 in the first hours, then sold off every single day through to a low near $2,250 on May 12 and 13 before a weak recovery to current levels.
No bounce worth mentioning. No session where buyers took control for more than a few hours. Just a slow, consistent bleed that accelerated when CPI landed.
Monday opened strong. ETH pushed toward $2,425 in the first few hours of the week and looked like it was setting up for an attempt at the $2,367 resistance cluster where the 50-day and 200-day MAs have converged.
That attempt never materialized. By Tuesday, ETH was already back below $2,350. By Wednesday it was below $2,320. The CPI print on Tuesday morning added fuel to the existing selling pressure. April inflation came in at 3.8% year over year, the highest since May 2023, against a consensus of 3.7%. Bond yields rose, the dollar strengthened, and crypto sold off across the board.
ETH took it harder than Bitcoin. While BTC dropped roughly 1.2% on the CPI day, ETH fell 2.2%, losing its support at $2,300 and posting the worst daily performance among the top 10 by market cap. That disproportionate reaction is typical for ETH. It has a higher beta to risk sentiment than BTC, and its correlation to the Nasdaq 100 has climbed to 0.78 over the past 30 days, its highest level in a year.
The weekly low near $2,250 was the weakest print since early April. The recovery to $2,304 since then has been modest.
ETH/USD 1W chart showing the drop from $2,370 open to a $2,250 low on May 12-13, with the weekly candle closing near $2,304. Source: CoinMarketCap.
The level that defines everything right now is $2,300. ETH briefly broke below it this week and has since clawed back above it. Whether it holds on a weekly close matters.
Above $2,300, the next resistance is the $2,335 to $2,367 zone where the 50-day and 200-day MAs have been sitting. Those two averages have converged to within a $5.80 band, making this cluster the defining technical event for ETH in May 2026. ETH has not managed a daily close above it all month.
A daily close above $2,367 flips both MAs from resistance to support and opens the path toward $2,500 and then $2,750.
On the downside, losing $2,300 on a weekly close is bearish. Below that, $2,211 is the 50-day EMA and the last meaningful floor before the conversation turns to $2,100 and below. Hot CPI data and rising oil prices are putting ETH at risk of a 30% drop if key support near $2,200 breaks.
The CPI print triggered ETH weakness through rising Treasury yields, a strengthening US Dollar Index, and a sharp repricing of Fed rate-cut probabilities for the back half of 2026. BTC absorbed a 1.2% drop. ETH absorbed nearly three times that.
Two additional supply-side factors added pressure. The Ethereum Foundation recently unstaked 21,271 ETH from Lido as part of a broader treasury rebalancing, placing more ETH back into potentially circulating supply. Timing matters here. That supply hit a market that was already cautious ahead of CPI.
On top of that, retail sentiment on Stocktwits flipped to bearish this week, and the Coinbase Bitcoin Premium Index staying negative signals weaker US spot demand. When retail turns bearish and US spot demand softens simultaneously, bounces are shallow.
The structural positives have not changed. Whales bought over 140,000 ETH worth around $322 million within a 96-hour window in early May. Spot ETH ETFs posted $356 million in net inflows in April, the first positive month after five consecutive months of outflows. The Glamsterdam upgrade targeting H1 2026 would triple layer-1 throughput if it delivers on schedule.
The CLARITY Act markup this week is also relevant for ETH. Van de Poppe noted on X that a narrative is building that the Act could actually be negative for Ethereum specifically, which has been contributing to selling pressure. A clear, positive outcome from the markup could dispel that narrative quickly.
Support: $2,300 / $2,250 (weekly low) / $2,211 Resistance: $2,335-$2,367 (50/200-day MA cluster) / $2,500 / $2,750
Ethereum had its worst week since April. Opened at $2,370, hit $2,425, then sold off to $2,250 before recovering to $2,304. The 50/200-day MA cluster at $2,335 to $2,367 was never seriously tested. CPI did most of the damage.
Hold $2,300 on the weekly close and the structure is bruised but intact. Lose it and $2,211 becomes the next line in the sand.
Bearish short-term. The fundamental case is still there, but the macro got worse this week and ETH is the asset in this market that feels macro moves most acutely.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.


