The numbers tell two contradictory stories about Ethereum. On one hand, the network is busier than ever — 13.2 million monthly active addresses in the first quarter, a record 25.78 transactions per second, and tokenized assets surging to $203.4 billion. On the other, the price has been gutted. Ethereum is down 43% against the dollar since January, and the ETH/BTC ratio cratered to 0.027 on June 21 — its lowest level since early 2023. At around $1,710, the asset is trading just 13% above its 52-week low.
The disconnect extends beyond price. Fee revenue from Layer-1 activity collapsed to $39.9 million last quarter, an 82% year-over-year plunge, as December’s Fusaka upgrade slashed data costs. More users, more throughput, less income — that is the uncomfortable arithmetic Ethereum’s design now faces. Meanwhile, the open interest in ETH futures halved from $17 billion to $10 billion over the first six months of 2026, a classic sign of capitulation as speculative froth exits the market.
Yet not everyone is running for the exits. Between June 4 and 7, large holders pulled 475,000 ETH off exchanges, a move that reeks of accumulation rather than panic. The divergence in sentiment is most striking when Bitcoin enters the frame. Ethereum’s correlation with the Nasdaq 100 sits at 0.78, versus just 0.55 for Bitcoin — meaning any macro shock that rattles tech stocks punches ETH hard. The US-Iran conflict in May and June triggered a wave of selling, and the weaker inflows into spot ETFs only added to the pressure.
Tokenization Boom Offsets DeFi Slowdown
On-chain activity is more nuanced than a simple blanket expansion. DeFi’s total value locked slipped 11% quarter on quarter, though it still stands 22% higher than a year ago. Lending and trading volumes have faded. But the tokenized asset segment is a different beast. Market capitalisation hit $203.4 billion, up 43% from a year earlier, with tokenised commodities — led by gold — adding 60% in the quarter alone. BlackRock, JPMorgan Chase and Fidelity International have all launched fresh tokenised funds on Ethereum, signalling that institutional appetite for the infrastructure remains robust even as the price languishes.
Glamsterdam: A Make-or-Break Upgrade
The next potential catalyst is the Glamsterdam protocol upgrade, the most comprehensive overhaul since the Merge. It bundles ten improvement proposals aimed at hitting 10,000 transactions per second and slashing gas fees by 78%. Core components include embedded separation of block proposal from block construction and parallel transaction processing. The upgrade has reached its final devnet phase and is slated for the third quarter of 2026, having slipped from an original June target. Technicians warn of near-term downside risk to $1,660, but whether Glamsterdam can reverse the price decline depends on timely delivery and whether the fee structure actually shifts revenue dynamics — or if the income drain simply accelerates.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Ethereum?
Foundation in Turmoil, Funding Gap Widens
While the technology marches forward, the Ethereum Foundation is mired in a leadership crisis that shows no sign of abating. Eight departures in five months have hollowed out the organisation. Co-executive director Hsiao-Wei Wang resigned on June 19 or 20, leaving both co-director roles vacant — she had only taken the post in March 2025 after Tomasz Stańczak left in February. Bastian Aue now steps in as interim director, becoming the ninth leadership change in a short span. Other high-profile exits this year include Tim Beiko, Josh Stark and Trent Van Epps — figures who have shaped Ethereum’s development for years.
Van Epps, in an exit warning, flagged a structural funding shortfall. Core development requires roughly $30 million per year, he estimates, but available resources fall well short. The foundation’s “stake-to-fund” model generates only $3.9 million to $5.4 million annually from its roughly 70,000 staked ETH — just 0.16% of the total supply. The Client Incentive Program expired in April, and the foundation was forced to sell 10,000 ETH to Bitmine in April and May after unstaking events. Between the leadership vacuum and the thin financial buffer, the organisation looks stretched just as the network faces its most ambitious upgrade.
MEV Bot Robbed, Network Chugs Along
A security incident on June 20 added a layer of irony. The notorious MEV bot “jaredfromsubway.eth” — responsible for roughly 70% of all sandwich attacks on Ethereum between 2024 and 2025 — was itself drained of $7.5 million. An attacker used 66 fake token contracts to trick the bot into releasing its holdings. Part of the loot moved through Tornado Cash. The episode underscores that even the predators can become prey in a fast-moving ecosystem.
Technical Picture: Support Holds, but Barely
On the charts, the picture is fragile. The relative strength index stands at 38.6, below neutral but not yet oversold. The next major support lies at $1,500, barely 12% below current levels — a zone defended during the June 6 low of $1,512. If that breaks, the next floor is around $1,200. Ethereum currently trades 28% below its 200-day moving average and 16% below its 50-day. The uptick in whale accumulation and the approaching Glamsterdam upgrade offer glimmers of hope, but the combination of a leaderless foundation, a $30 million funding gap, and a macro environment hostile to risk assets makes for a treacherous near-term outlook.
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