Ethereum(ETH) holders have pushed the staked supply to a record 32%, while the amount of the token held on exchanges has fallen to roughly half its 2021 peak. Key Points: Ethereum's staking r
Ethereum(ETH) holders have pushed the staked supply to a record 32%, while the amount of the token held on exchanges has fallen to roughly half its 2021 peak.
Key Points:
- Ethereum's staking ratio reached a fresh all-time high near 32%, the largest share of supply ever locked in validators.
- Exchange reserves have dropped from above 33 million ETH in 2021 to about 14.9 million today.
- Persistent negative netflows show more ETH leaving exchanges than arriving, tightening available supply.
Ethereum Staking Sets Record
Holders are moving coins into staking and off trading venues at a steady clip, and on-chain trackers show the staked share has reached a new high.
The proportion of supply locked in validators has risen from near zero in early 2021 to roughly 32% by 2026.
Growth came in fits and starts, with several pauses along the way. The broad direction never changed.
Exchange reserves tell a parallel story. They stood above 33 million ETH at the 2021 peak and now sit near 14.9 million, a decline of more than half.
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Why The Supply Squeeze Matters
Less ETH on exchanges means fewer coins are immediately available to trade or sell. Combined with rising staking, the data points to investors shifting into longer-term storage.
Frequent negative netflows reinforce the trend, with more ETH leaving exchanges than entering them.
One analyst argues the record staking rate builds a genuine supply floor, yet warns that a price held up by derivatives leverage rather than spot demand can unwind in hours, not days.
That tension leaves the market exposed even as the supply side tightens. A holder base that grows more patient by the month should keep tightening it further.
Ethereum Reserves And Recent Drift
The slide in exchange balances is not new. Reserves started 2026 near 16.2 million ETH and broke below 15 million by late April, extending a multi-year downtrend that accelerated through 2025.
Ethereum traded around $2,277 in early May, still well off its August 2025 record near $4,946. Whether the structural squeeze translates into higher prices will hinge on demand and liquidity returning to the market.
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