

Ethereum fell below $2,000 after failing to hold support at $2,020, extending a fresh decline that followed similar weakness in Bitcoin. The drop broke a key bullish trend line and pushed ETH into a bearish zone. Price later touched $1,912 and then began to consolidate below $1,980 and the 100-hour Simple Moving Average.
Ethereum’s latest slide began after it broke below the $2,020 area, which had served as a key support level. This move shifted short-term market structure and placed the asset under added pressure.
The decline also sent ETH below $1,920 before buyers slowed the drop near $1,912. Since then, the token has traded below the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement level of the move from $2,200 to $1,912. Price now sits below both $1,980 and the 100-hour Simple Moving Average. This keeps attention on whether buyers can defend nearby support and attempt a rebound.
Immediate resistance stands near $1,980. After that, traders are watching $2,020, the same level that failed during the latest sell-off. The next major barrier appears near $2,050. This zone matches the 50% Fibonacci retracement of the decline from the $2,200 swing high to the $1,912 low.
If ETH breaks above $2,050, the next upside target may come near $2,120. A stronger move could then push the price toward $2,200 and possibly $2,250.
If Ethereum fails to clear $2,020, downside pressure may return. In that case, the market will keep watching the $1,920 area for signs of stability. The first major support below that level sits near $1,880. A clear move under that zone could expose Ethereum to another leg lower.
The next support lies near $1,850. If losses deepen, the price could slide toward $1,810, while $1,750 stands as the main support area. This setup leaves Ethereum between clear resistance overhead and defined support below. This range may shape the next short-term move.
Can growing network activity help steady price action while ETH remains under technical pressure? For now, the chart shows a market stabilizing after a sharp rejection. Traders continue to track whether support holds or breaks further.
At the same time, Ethereum activity has shifted further toward stablecoins. USDC has emerged as a leading asset on the network as usage patterns continue to change. Low transaction fees helped drive that shift. Gas prices have dropped near historic lows, with gas again falling below 1 gWei.
This environment made stablecoin transfers practical for retail users. USDT and USDC transfers now cost less than $0.01 in many cases. Token Terminal data shows stablecoin activity and holder counts rising. USDC in particular has gained traction as more users return to Ethereum for lower-cost transfers.
Ethereum still leads other chains in raw stablecoin supply. Meanwhile, layer-two networks such as Polygon and Base are also seeing growth in USDC reserves and transfer activity. Over the past month, USDC supply on Ethereum rose by 12%. The text links that growth to broader activity and demand for an asset aligned with MiCAR and the US Genius Act.
Also Read: Is Ethereum Rising Again? Binance ETH Volume Hits 6-Month High
DEX swaps have also become far cheaper. Some swaps now cost about $0.03, compared with earlier periods when costs could reach $100. Lower NFT activity and fewer token launches have also helped keep fees low. Token transfers now cost under $0.01, which has supported a rise in USDC usage.
Token Terminal data shows USDC transfers climbed sharply through 2025 and approached record levels by February 2026. Non-adjusted transfer volume topped $1.7 trillion, up 250% from the same month in 2025.
Ethereum price fell below $2,000 after losing key support near $2,020, while USDC activity rose as low fees drove more stablecoin transfers. The network also saw cheaper swaps and transfers, showing a shift toward practical usage. Traders will now watch whether support holds and if rising network activity helps steady price action.