Ethereum US Spot Demand Slips Amid Crypto Market Pressure

In brief

  • Key metrics such as ETF flows, Coinbase Premium, and the CME basis signal a decline in U.S. institutional demand for Ethereum.
  • Experts cite a closed Grayscale arbitrage window and a broader macro risk reassessment as primary causes.
  • The long-term outlook remains bullish, contingent on Ethereum’s utility and real-world asset adoption.

Demand for Ethereum from U.S. investors has slowed considerably over the past week as Bitcoin extended Wednesday’s losses.

The drop in interest in Ethereum and Bitcoin comes as Bitcoin’s price shed 2.8% over the past 24 hours, hitting an intraday low of $108,201, according to CoinGecko data.

That has put pressure on the broader crypto market, leading to $832 million in total liquidations, with longs accounting for $666 million of those, per CoinGlass data.

The decline is quantified in a new CryptoQuant report, which noted that the seven-day average outflow from U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs hit 281 BTC, the weakest reading since April. Similarly, Ethereum ETF inflows have nearly stalled since mid-August, underscoring subdued investor confidence.

Analysts point to a confluence of factors driving the shift.

“The early wave of Ethereum ETF inflows was driven less by conviction and more by reallocation mechanics — namely the migration from Grayscale’s legacy ETHE product.” Lacie Zhang, Research Analyst, Bitget Wallet, told Decrypt.

The eventual closing of this arbitrage window, coupled with Ethereum’s underperformance relative to Bitcoin and Solana, naturally cooled the ETF inflows, according to Zhang.

The ETF outflows reflect rotation out of high-beta crypto exposure amid new macro uncertainty, Enmanuel Cardozo, Market Analyst, Brickken, told Decrypt. “Institutional players are now reassessing risk in the face of new conditions, elevated bond yields, and fading speculative appetite, given its ‘complex to value’ narrative compared to Bitcoin.”

Beyond Ethereum-specific issues, a broader macro reassessment is underway with upcoming rate cuts, a worsening labor market, and Fed chief Jerome Powell’s comments on quantitative tightening.

“Institutional players are now reassessing risk in the face of new conditions, elevated bond yields, and fading speculative appetite, given its ‘complex to value’ narrative compared to Bitcoin,” Enmanuel Cardozo, Market Analyst at Brickken, told Decrypt.

The declining U.S. demand is further evidenced by the drop in the Coinbase premium, with a steady descent toward zero for both Bitcoin and Ethereum, which CryptoQuant analysts highlighted as a sign of reduced domestic buying pressure.

Simultaneously, Ethereum’s six-month CME basis dropped to a three-month low of 3%, indicating weaker demand for leveraged exposure.

“With the basis nearing zero, institutions are no longer willing to pay a premium for Ethereum exposure, cooling down short-term appreciation expectations,” Cardozo said.

He added that elevated CME open interest suggests these investors have shifted from “aggressive positioning to risk management mode,” not a full exit.

What’s next?

Despite the short-term drop in institutional interest, both experts reaffirmed that this behavior does not affect Ethereum’s long-term bullish outlook.

“On-chain data doesn’t show broad distribution,” Zhang said, explaining that “liquidity expansions still drive risk, and this phase reflects rotation, not reversal.”

Instead of new inflows, Ethereum needs new reasons to hold, such as tangible revenues, cheaper scaling, and a clearer fiscal narrative for Ethereum to serve as productive collateral, the Bitget Wallet research analyst explained. “Once those fundamentals align, ETFs will follow again — not lead.”

“If institutions step back temporarily, innovation steps in,” Cardozo said. “The next leg up will likely be driven by real-world utility, tokenized assets, AI-linked infrastructure, and scalable DeFi protocols that generate real-world yield beyond speculation.”

Despite the bearish short-term data, retail sentiment on prediction markets tells a different story. Users on Myriad, launched by Decrypt’s parent company Dastan, have placed a 66% chance that Ethereum hits $4,500 before it drops to $3,000, directly contradicting the signals of declining institutional demand.

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Source: https://decrypt.co/346765/ethereum-us-spot-demand-slips-amid-crypto-market-pressure