Key Takeaways
- Ethereum trades near $1,644, down 66.8% from its August 2025 all-time high of $4,946.
- Spot Ethereum ETFs recorded a single-week outflow of $241M, with BlackRock briefly reversing the trend.
- Ethereum’s DeFi TVL holds near $37B in June 2026, but ETH dominance has compressed to roughly 9%.
ETH by the Numbers
As of June 9, 2026, ETH’s 24-hour range sits between $1,619 and $1,712, with a seven-day range spanning $1,522 to $1,909. At 2:30 p.m. EDT on Tuesday, ETH is $1,644 per unit. Performance across timeframes paints a bleak picture:
- 24 hours: -2.6%
- 7 days: -14.5%
- 14 days: -20.9%
- 30 days: -30.5%
- 1 year: -35.9%
Ethereum’s market cap stands near $199 billion. Its dominance has compressed to roughly 9.1% to 9.3%, compared to bitcoin’s dominance near 58%.
Why ETH Is Struggling
Analysts point to several overlapping pressures. Bitcoin’s dominance near 58% reflects institutional preference for BTC as a store-of-value asset, amplified by stronger inflows into spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs). The ETH/ BTC ratio touched lows near 0.027 in May, signaling significant capital rotation away from ethereum during periods of macro uncertainty.
Spot ethereum ETFs have added to the headwinds. One multi-week outflow streak saw funds shed approximately $241 million in a single week. A brief inflow of $19 million, led by Blackrock, broke a 17-day outflow run but provided only temporary relief. One converted fund logged roughly $3 billion in redemptions following its ETF conversion, reflecting pent-up selling pressure that had built ahead of the product launch.
Macro conditions have not helped. Analysts, including Fundstrat’s Tom Lee, have flagged the inverse correlation between oil prices and ETH, describing the relationship as reaching historically elevated levels. Sticky inflation, geopolitical tensions, and broader risk-off sentiment have weighed harder on high-beta assets like ETH than on bitcoin.
Upgrade Trade-offs
The Pectra upgrade, activated May 7, 2025, introduced account abstraction via EIP-7702, raised the maximum validator stake to 2,048 ETH, and expanded blob throughput to reduce Layer 2 fees. The Fusaka upgrade in December 2025 extended those scaling improvements. Both are considered long-term positives for ether’s usability and adoption.
However, lower base-layer fees have reduced ETH burn under EIP-1559, easing the deflationary pressure that had previously supported ETH’s price narrative. Combined with layer two ( L2) activity pulling transaction volume from mainnet, some analysts argue ETH is evolving more into infrastructure than a high-demand gas token in the near term.
The Bull Case Remains Intact
Despite the drawdown, many proponents believe ethereum‘s fundamentals remain among the strongest in its history. Decentralized finance ( DeFi) total value locked (TVL) on Ethereum mainnet stands near $37 billion, still the largest by a wide margin. Developer activity, institutional tokenization experiments, and real-world asset ( RWA) narratives continue to favor Ethereum as the dominant smart contract settlement layer.
Staking also provides a structural floor of demand, with roughly 30% or more of ETH supply locked in validators earning approximately 2% to 4% APY. The Glamsterdam upgrade, expected later in 2026, targets MEV fairness and efficiency improvements.
Recovery likely hinges on a macro shift toward risk-on sentiment, a rotation out of bitcoin dominance, and continued execution on Ethereum’s roadmap.
