According to a report shared by CryptoQuant, recent Ethereum market data points to a growing imbalance between derivatives positioning and underlying market risk.
Binance derivatives flows show a strong long bias emerging, while on-chain revenue metrics signal heightened network activity often associated with periods of volatility.
Together, these signals suggest optimism among leveraged traders is building at the same time historical stress markers are reappearing.
Ethereum open interest on Binance has declined significantly over recent weeks, falling from approximately $8 billion to $3.9 billion. This drawdown began around January 14 and represents nearly a 50% reduction in total outstanding derivative contracts.
Despite the contraction in open interest, cumulative net taker volume tells a different story. Since February 4, Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD) has risen sharply, increasing from roughly $2.4 billion to $4.15 billion. This divergence indicates that the majority of closed positions were shorts, while long exposure largely remained in place.
Such positioning reflects a market where downside bets have been aggressively unwound, leaving long exposure concentrated. Historically, this configuration points to elevated optimism driven primarily by derivatives rather than spot demand, increasing sensitivity to adverse price moves.
The second dataset tracks daily total blockchain revenue across major networks, with Ethereum’s contribution dominated by gas fees. These fees are generated through ETH transfers, decentralized exchange activity, smart contract interactions, and liquidation events, which often intensify during volatile market conditions.
Ethereum’s daily revenue recently surged toward $6 million, marking one of the highest readings in recent months. On February 6, revenue reached approximately $5.8 million, a level last observed on January 31, 2026, when Ethereum’s price declined from above $2,700 shortly afterward.
The last instance of Ethereum revenue exceeding $6 million occurred on October 13, 2025. That surge coincided with a subsequent correction after ETH peaked above $4,250, reinforcing the historical association between revenue spikes and heightened market stress.
The combination of shrinking open interest, rising long-side dominance, and elevated network revenue presents a mixed signal. While higher revenue suggests increased network usage and transaction demand, similar spikes in the past have aligned with periods of forced activity, including liquidations and defensive positioning.
At the same time, derivatives markets appear increasingly skewed toward long exposure following the exit of short positions. This imbalance reduces immediate downside pressure but raises vulnerability if price momentum stalls or reverses, as remaining leverage becomes one-sided.
Ethereum’s current market structure reflects strong optimism among leveraged traders alongside signs of elevated on-chain activity that have historically preceded corrections.
With shorts largely flushed and longs concentrated, the market’s next move may depend less on positioning and more on whether demand can continue expanding without triggering renewed volatility.
The post Ethereum Derivatives Tilt Long as Network Revenue Spikes appeared first on ETHNews.

