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Just came across the Ethereum Rainbow Chart and honestly it's a pretty interesting way to visualize where ETH sits relative to its long-term trend. For those unfamiliar, it basically plots Ethereum's price on a logarithmic scale and divides it into colored bands that show different valuation zones based on adoption cycles and historical patterns.
So here's what caught my eye about the current setup. Back in late January, ETH was hovering around $2,895, which put it squarely in the 'Still Cheap' band of the eth rainbow chart. That band typically ranges from roughly $2,577 to $3,652, suggesting the price was inexpensive relative to the long-term growth curve but no longer deeply undervalued. Fast forward to now in mid-April and we're looking at $2,190, which actually dips back down into the 'Accumulate' zone. That's the band where long-term holders historically built positions when downside risk was diminishing.
The interesting part about using the eth rainbow chart for analysis is that it doesn't pretend to predict exact prices. Instead, it shows you where Ethereum is positioned against its historical trend. Looking at the band structure, if ETH gradually moved into the 'Steady' band (which spans roughly $3,652 to $5,252), we'd be seeing price action in the low-to-mid $3,000 range. That's the zone where the chart suggests balanced market conditions and price tracks the long-term trend pretty closely.
Above that, things get progressively more stretched. The 'HODL' band signals rising optimism, then you've got increasingly euphoric zones like 'Is This the Flippening?' and eventually 'Maximum Bubble Territory' at the extreme end. But honestly, the real value in the eth rainbow chart isn't predicting the top or bottom. It's more about understanding whether you're buying in a zone where historically smart money accumulated, or whether valuations are already running hot.
The logarithmic scale is key here because it accounts for how Ethereum's growth has diminished returns over time. Each band gets wider as you move up, which makes sense given that the dollar amounts matter less as the price gets higher. It's a useful reality check when you're wondering if current prices are reasonable or if you're chasing something that's already stretched pretty far from the trend.
Worth keeping an eye on where the next support and resistance zones are if you're actively trading or just curious about valuation levels.