Ethereum falls faster than bitcoin as crypto tape turns red
The second-largest cryptocurrency is nearing the $2,100 mark, declining more than 9% in the last seven days, a steeper decrease than its older sibling bitcoin, which is also suffering.
Ethereum ETFs have had five consecutive days of outflows combining for $255 million, data from SoSoValue shows.
Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs and Harvard University both filed 13Fs showing each pulled back their exposure to ethereum.
Goldman now holds nearly $178 million in BlackRock’s iShares Ethereum Trust ETF, down from $679 million, according to its latest 13F filing. It also exited its $394 million position in the Fidelity Ethereum Fund as well as a smaller position in ETHZilla, while adding $67 million of the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF.
Harvard completely trimmed its ethereum exposure. The endowment did not report any ethereum ETF holdings in its latest 13F filing, submitted Friday, but showed an $86.8 million position in BlackRock’s iShares Ethereum Trust ETF in its previous 13F filing in February.
But ethereum bulls remain: treasury behemoth BitMine Immersion Technologies continued its accumlation of ethereum, albeit at a slower pace. “Over the past week, we acquired 71,672 ETH,” Chairman Tom Lee said in a Monday press release. “We view the recent pullback of ETH to below $2,200 as an attractive opportunity.” The firm’s unrealized loss now exceeds more than $7.3 billion.
Traders aren’t so bullish: prediction market-implied odds of ethereum breaking $2,500 in May stand at just 7%, a sharp drop-off from a week ago, when the probability was at 57%.
(Event contracts are offered through Robinhood Derivatives, LLC — probabilities referenced or sourced from KalshiEx LLC or ForecastEx LLC.)