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A sudden surge of institutional and corporate interest in Ethereum (ETH) is setting the stage for what Bitwise Asset Managementās chief investment officer MattāÆHougan calls a āstructural imbalanceā between supply and demandāone that could propel prices well beyond the cryptocurrencyās alreadyārapid ascent this year.
In a memo circulated to clients on 22āÆJulyāÆ2025, Hougan noted that Ether has climbed more than 65āÆpercent in the past month and over 160āÆpercent since April. The rally, he argues, is being driven not by sentiment alone but by a dramatic mismatch between the amount of Ether produced by the network and the quantities now being absorbed by exchangeātraded products (ETPs) and newly formed āETH treasuryā corporations.
Ethereum Demand Shock Is Inevitable
āSometimes it really is that simple,ā Hougan wrote, echoing his longāstanding thesis that, in the short run, asset prices are dictated primarily by flows. He drew a direct parallel to bitcoinās explosive performance following the launch of U.S. spot bitcoin ETPs in JanuaryāÆ2024, when āETPs, corporations, and governments acquired more than 1.5āÆmillion bitcoin, while the Bitcoin blockchain produced just over 300,000.ā
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The same dynamic, he contends, has finally taken hold in the Ether marketāonly more forcefully. Between 15āÆMay and 20āÆJuly, spot Ether ETPs attracted more thanāÆ$5āÆbillion in net inflows, while a handful of publicly traded companies began stockpiling the token as a primary treasury asset. Among the most aggressive buyers:
- BitmineāÆImmersion Technologies (BMNR) accumulated 300,657āÆETHāaboutāÆ$1.13āÆbillion at current pricesāand declared an ambition āof obtaining 5āÆpercent of all ETH supply.ā
- SharpLinkāÆGaming (SBET) purchased 280,706āÆETH ($1.06āÆbillion) and disclosed plans to raise an additional $6āÆbillion for future acquisitions.
- BitāÆDigital (BTBT) liquidated its bitcoin reserves after raising $170āÆmillion, redirecting the proceeds to more than 100,000āÆETH (roughly $375āÆmillion).
- The Ether Machine (DYNX) outlined an initial public offering built around a $1.6āÆbillion Ether treasury.
In aggregate, ETPs and public companies bought approximately 2.83āÆmillion Etherāvalued at north of $10āÆbillionāduring the nineāweek stretch. Over the same period, the Ethereum network created only about 88,000āÆETH in new issuance, a ratio of demand to supply that Hougan calculates at 32āÆtoāÆ1. āNo wonder the price of ETH has soared,ā he observed.
Whether that pressure continues is now the central question for investors. Houganās answer is an unequivocal yes. He points out that, even after the recent buying spree, Ether remains underāowned relative to bitcoin in the ETP market: Ether funds control less than 12āÆpercent of the assets held by bitcoin ETPs, despite ETHās market capitalisation standing at roughly oneāfifth of BTCās. āWith all the excitement surrounding stablecoins and tokenizationāwhich are primarily built on Ethereumāwe think that will change,ā he said, predicting billions of dollars in additional inflows āin the next few months.ā
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Meanwhile, the economics of listed ācrypto treasuryā firms appear to be selfāreinforcing. Shares of BMNR and SBET each trade at nearly twice the net value of the Ether they hold, a premium that incentivises management teams to issue equity, raise capital, and purchase still more ETH. āAs long as that remains true, you can bet Wall Street firms will funnel money into more ETH purchases,ā Hougan wrote.
Bitwise projects that ETPs and treasury companies could absorb as much as $20āÆbillion worth of Etherāaround 5.33āÆmillion coins at present pricesāover the coming year. The protocolās issuance schedule, by contrast, is expected to add only about 800,000āÆETH to circulation during the same window, implying a 7ātoā1 imbalance.
āThatās an even higher ratio than weāve seen for Bitcoin since the spot ETPs launched,ā Hougan said.
Sceptics often argue that Etherās longāterm supply is not capped in the way bitcoinās is, and that its valuation hinges on factors beyond simple scarcity, such as network usage and transaction fees. Hougan does not dispute those points but insists they are secondary in the near term. āIn the short term, the price of everything is set by supply and demand, and right now, there is more demand for ETH than supply,ā he concluded.
At press time, ETH traded at $3,703.

Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com