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Ethereum rallies as U.S. CPI inflation slows to 3.5% – Details

Ethereum's rally gains macro support as institutions quietly tightened available supply.

Ethereum jumps 4% as U.S. inflation eases while institutional demand strengthens

Ethereum entered the U.S. inflation release with bullish momentum already building as buyers defended higher lows following its recovery from June’s weakness. That momentum strengthened after headline CPI slowed to 3.5%, below the 3.8% forecast and 4.2% prior reading.

Source: Trading Economics

The data weakened the Dollar Index and eased Treasury yields, encouraging fresh demand for risk assets. Binance then recorded more than $1.2 billion in Ethereum [ETH] taker buy volume, accelerating the existing advance and lifting Ethereum toward the $1,895 zone.

Rather than sparking a new trend, the inflation surprise reinforced the ongoing recovery, suggesting macro conditions strengthened buyers’ conviction even as Bitcoin continued attracting the larger share of risk capital.

Source: Darkfost on X

Yet the rally soon lost momentum as Bitcoin attracted stronger relative demand and early buyers locked in profits. That divergence suggests traders welcomed improving macro conditions but still preferred Bitcoin [BTC] as the market’s primary macro hedge.

That shift left Ethereum’s advance dependent on broader capital rotation rather than the CPI surprise alone.

Institutional accumulation tightens Ethereum’s supply

The macro-driven rebound has drawn attention back to Ethereum, yet institutional positioning had already started shifting before the latest rally.

Over the past two weeks, exchange withdrawals culminated in a 90,024 ETH net outflow on 13 July. In addition to that, average seven-day net flows remained negative at roughly 5,000–15,000 ETH per day.

Source: CryptoQuant

As a result of the consistent movement of assets off exchanges, the steady migration reduced Exchange Reserves to approximately 15.3 million ETH, with over 33% of the circulating supply now held off exchanges through staking, DeFi, and institutional custody.

Source: CryptoQuant

The metrics show that institutions are buying up liquid supply rather than speculative enthusiasm.

Yet, it appears retail participation is still low. As a result, there is less of a potential for an immediate sell-off due to institutions taking supply off the open market.

This further reinforces Ethereum’s long-term structural position within the market. Needless to say, it continues supporting the thesis that Ethereum will remain volatile for the short term but will ultimately strengthen long term.


Final Summary

  • Ethereum [ETH] rallied on easing U.S. inflation, but the move lacked follow-through beyond the initial macro-driven buying.
  • Ethereum exchange outflows and institutional accumulation continue tightening supply despite subdued retail participation.
Disclaimer: AMBCrypto's content is meant to be informational in nature and should not be interpreted as investment advice. Trading, buying or selling cryptocurrencies should be considered a high-risk investment and every reader is advised to do their own research before making any decisions.

Muriuki Lazaro

Journalist

Muriuki Lazaro is a on-chain data analyst with a B.Sc. in Data Science. Muriuki specializes in dissecting complex on-chain data into clear and accurate insights for readers in the crypto ecosystem, with a particular focus on Bitcoin.

AMBCrypto was founded in 2018 with a mission to simplify and bring the latest blockchain and cryptocurrency news to our readers. We have quickly grown into the digital news source for an emerging generation of cryptocurrency enthusiasts, reaching more than a million readers on a monthly basis, across the globe.