
On-chain data shows the Ethereum Daily Active Addresses metric has shot up recently. Here’s what this could mean for the cryptocurrency.
Ethereum Daily Active Addresses Near Highest Level In 2 Years
According to data from institutional DeFi solutions provider Sentora, the Ethereum blockchain has seen activity light up recently. The “Daily Active Addresses” is an on-chain indicator that keeps track of the total number of ETH addresses that are taking part in some kind of transfer activity every day.
When the value of this metric rises, it means a greater number of users are making moves on the network. Such a trend implies the trading interest in the cryptocurrency may be going up.
On the other hand, the indicator observing a drop suggests investor activity is going down on the blockchain. This kind of trend can be a potential sign that attention is shifting away from the asset.
Now, here is a chart that shows the trend in the Daily Active Addresses for Ethereum over the past year:
The value of the metric appears to have shot up in recent days | Source: Sentora on X
As displayed in the above graph, the Ethereum Daily Active Addresses saw deviation above its recent consolidation level of 600,000 with the latest rally, implying the price action brought interest in the asset.
Interestingly, the trend has accelerated in the last few days, with the indicator registering a sharp spike. This rapid increase has taken its value to 931,310, which is the highest daily level in almost two years.
Historically, high transaction activity from the users has often been a precursor to volatility. Any price action emerging out of the trading can, in theory, go either way, as the Daily Active Addresses contains no information about whether buying or selling is dominant, just that the investors are making moves.
It would appear that the spike in the Ethereum Daily Active Addresses may have led into volatility this time as well, as the cryptocurrency’s price has plunged since it has appeared.
In some other news, stablecoin USDT has seen its 30-day moving average (MA) transfer volume recover to the $52.9 billion mark recently, as on-chain analytics firm Glassnode has explained in an X post.
The trend in the USDT transfer volume over the last few years | Source: Glassnode on X
As displayed in the above graph, the USDT transfer volume has steadily been recovering since the 2022 crash. “This gradual climb reflects a slow but consistent recovery in stablecoin velocity and market activity,” notes Glassnode.
Interestingly, Ethereum has not even been among the top two networks that occupy the largest share of the stable’s volume.
The data of the USDT Transfer Volume across major networks | Source: Glassnode on X
Tron and BNB are the two networks leading in USDT volume, with the metric sitting at $23 billion and $14.9 billion, respectively.
ETH Price
At the time of writing, Ethereum is trading around $3,650, down around 3.5% in the last 24 hours.
Looks like ETH has just taken a hit | Source: ETHUSDT on TradingView
Featured image from Dall-E, Glassnode.com, IntoTheBlock.com, chart from TradingView.com

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