The first wave of spot Ethereum exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in the United States debuted on July 23, with inflows running above $100 million. While the positive flows signal a strong start for the funds, ether (ETH) may not witness the parabolic uptrend bitcoin (BTC) saw after asset managers launched its ETFs earlier this year.
In CryptoQuantâs latest weekly crypto report, on-chain experts explained that new money flows into digital asset products like ETFs would have a weaker effect on ETH than BTC due to the networksâ distinct multiplier effects.
According to analysts, Etherâs multiplier is lower than bitcoinâs and has remained low in 2024. The multiplier is the ratio of the change in market capitalization to the realized capitalization. This means that Etherâs market value responds less to fresh inflow of investment money. For every $1 of fresh money invested in bitcoin, the assetâs market cap has grown by $5. However, Etherâs market cap has increased by $1.34 for every $1 invested.
The CryptoQuant report further outlined other factors that could hinder ETH from experiencing bitcoinâs post-ETF launch growth. One of them is Etherâs rising supply.
Since Ethereum developers implemented the Dencun upgrade on the network in March, Etherâs supply has been rising. Dencun introduced a mechanism that allowed for data blobs and reduced transaction fees drastically; lower transaction fees translated to a decline in burned ETH.
Before Dencun, Ethereum implemented upgrades that ensured the network remained deflationary by burning a part of transaction fees. Since Dencun, etherâs supply has been increasing at a high rate, the fastest since The Merge in September 2022. At press time, ETH had a total and circulating supply of 120.22 million but no maximum supply. Conversely, BTC has a supply cap of 21 million.
Analysts said the structural change in Ethereumâs monetary policy is causing the network to lose its ultra-sound money narrative. The ultrasound concept insists that Ethereum has the potential to become more sound than Bitcoin by using features that preserve purchasing power and reduce ETH supply over time.
Although the price of ETH appears to have bottomed out, and indicators signal positive momentum, the assetâs spot trading volume on centralized exchanges is still to be considered. Since January, etherâs spot volume has been 85% that of bitcoin in the same period and 58% that of the leading cryptocurrency since 2020.
The post Spot ETF Inflows to Have Weaker Effect on Ether Than Bitcoin â CryptoQuant appeared first on CryptoPotato.
In CryptoQuantâs latest weekly crypto report, on-chain experts explained that new money flows into digital asset products like ETFs would have a weaker effect on ETH than BTC due to the networksâ distinct multiplier effects.
ETH Multiplier Lower Than BTC
According to analysts, Etherâs multiplier is lower than bitcoinâs and has remained low in 2024. The multiplier is the ratio of the change in market capitalization to the realized capitalization. This means that Etherâs market value responds less to fresh inflow of investment money. For every $1 of fresh money invested in bitcoin, the assetâs market cap has grown by $5. However, Etherâs market cap has increased by $1.34 for every $1 invested.
The CryptoQuant report further outlined other factors that could hinder ETH from experiencing bitcoinâs post-ETF launch growth. One of them is Etherâs rising supply.
Since Ethereum developers implemented the Dencun upgrade on the network in March, Etherâs supply has been rising. Dencun introduced a mechanism that allowed for data blobs and reduced transaction fees drastically; lower transaction fees translated to a decline in burned ETH.
ETH Supply is Increasing
Before Dencun, Ethereum implemented upgrades that ensured the network remained deflationary by burning a part of transaction fees. Since Dencun, etherâs supply has been increasing at a high rate, the fastest since The Merge in September 2022. At press time, ETH had a total and circulating supply of 120.22 million but no maximum supply. Conversely, BTC has a supply cap of 21 million.
Analysts said the structural change in Ethereumâs monetary policy is causing the network to lose its ultra-sound money narrative. The ultrasound concept insists that Ethereum has the potential to become more sound than Bitcoin by using features that preserve purchasing power and reduce ETH supply over time.
Although the price of ETH appears to have bottomed out, and indicators signal positive momentum, the assetâs spot trading volume on centralized exchanges is still to be considered. Since January, etherâs spot volume has been 85% that of bitcoin in the same period and 58% that of the leading cryptocurrency since 2020.
The post Spot ETF Inflows to Have Weaker Effect on Ether Than Bitcoin â CryptoQuant appeared first on CryptoPotato.