Ten days ago, spot Ethereum ETFs began trading on U.S. exchanges. It was a moment that many in the crypto industry had spent the better part of two years lobbying for, and its arrival caps what has been a genuinely eventful year for the asset class. But we would be doing our readers a disservice if we let the ETF launch dominate the full picture. Our job is to look past the event - to understand whether the underlying asset, the technology, and the adoption data actually justify meaningful exposure.
In this research note, we synthesise the most important developments in Ethereum's story through mid-2024: what the blockchain actually does, what the Dencun upgrade accomplished, what on-chain data tells us about genuine usage, how the new ETFs change the supply-demand equation, and where the real risks lie. We hold positions in digital assets as part of a broader portfolio and have a direct interest in getting this right. This is our honest assessment.
What Ethereum Actually Is - And What It Isn't
Let's start with a distinction that matters more than most coverage acknowledges. Ethereum and Ether are not the same thing. Ethereum is the blockchain platform - a decentralised global computer capable of running self-executing contracts and hosting applications. Ether (ETH) is the native currency of that platform, the fuel that makes it run. When someone says they're "investing in Ethereum," they almost certainly mean they're buying ETH - but understanding why ETH has value requires understanding what happens on the platform it powers.
The most useful mental model we've encountered for Ethereum is that of a global computing platform with its own native currency. Think of it less like a payment network and more like an open-source app store, where every interaction - every smart contract execution, every trade on a decentralised exchange, every NFT transfer - requires a payment in ETH. The more the platform is used, the more demand there is for ETH. That's the core of the investment thesis.
Where this gets complicated is in evaluating just how much the platform is actually being used, and whether that usage is growing in meaningful ways. We'll come to that when we look at the on-chain data. But first, it's worth mapping the main application categories clearly, because the framing matters for how you assess Ethereum's long-term potential.
Four Real Use Cases - And What They're Worth Today
There is no shortage of breathless content about Ethereum's "limitless applications". Most of it conflates technologies with applications, overstates adoption, and buries the lead. In the interest of clarity, here are the four use cases we believe are materially real and relevant to the investment case right now.
1. Decentralised Finance (DeFi)
DeFi is the most important use case by far, and it is operating at genuine institutional scale. Ethereum hosts six DeFi protocols each holding over $30 billion in assets. Uniswap V3 alone processes roughly $2 billion in Ethereum every single day across tens of thousands of active users. Synthetix - a decentralised synthetic asset protocol - holds more in total assets than Goldman Sachs Bank holds in cash deposits.
The use cases within DeFi are still predominantly crypto-native: lending, borrowing, and trading between digital assets. The genuinely disruptive potential - tokenising real-world assets, replacing traditional lending infrastructure - exists in early form. Austria issued €1.5 billion in sovereign bonds on Ethereum in 2018. Hamilton Lane tokenised $2.1 billion in private assets on Polygon (an Ethereum layer-2 network). These are real proof points, but they remain exceptions rather than the norm.
Scale: $370B+ assets in top protocols2. Blockchain Gaming
Gaming is where we see the most credible long-term growth story beyond DeFi. The core value proposition is compelling: blockchain enables players to genuinely own in-game assets as NFTs, trade them freely, and earn real economic value from their play. Active blockchain gaming projects on Ethereum include Axie Infinity, Gala Games, League of Kingdoms, and Pirate Nation, with metaverse projects Decentraland and The Sandbox adding a full virtual-world dimension.
The overall blockchain gaming market sits at around $3 billion today - a fraction of a $300+ billion global gaming industry. But projections to $90 billion by 2030 are credible if traditional publishers begin integrating NFT ownership mechanics. EA has publicly expressed interest; Rockstar Games has sparked speculation. Nothing is confirmed, but the convergence of gaming culture with digital asset ownership feels more inevitable than speculative to us.
Market today: ~$3B | Projected 2030: ~$90B3. Digital Art & NFTs
NFTs crashed hard from their 2021 mania peak, with many pieces trading at 99% below all-time highs. That's an important lesson in speculative excess. But the underlying technology - the ability to mint, verify, and transfer unique digital ownership records - has not gone away. The NFT market capitalisation remains around $90 billion as of mid-2024. Disney launched its NFT collectibles platform "Disney Pinnacle" in 2023 as a brand extension play.
We view NFT art as a real but volatile sub-market within Ethereum's ecosystem. Forbes projects the NFT industry growing above $230 billion by 2030. We treat this projection with appropriate scepticism, but we note that digital scarcity as a concept is now established - the infrastructure for proving it lives primarily on Ethereum.
NFT market cap: ~$90B | Forbes 2030 est.: $230B+4. Crypto Gambling & Emerging Applications
Crypto gambling represents a real but difficult-to-size slice of Ethereum activity. Estimates range from $250 million to $90 billion depending on how broadly the category is drawn - the blurry boundary between gambling, gaming, and DeFi speculation makes it almost impossible to quantify cleanly. We include it because it contributes real transaction volume to the network, but we make no investment case around it.
There are additional theoretical use cases - digital identity verification, blockchain-based voting systems - that have virtually no adoption today. We do not count them. The investment case must stand on what is actually happening, not what could theoretically happen one day.
Size: highly contested - $250M to $90B estimatesThe Dencun Upgrade: Lower Fees, Higher Throughput - At a Cost
The most technically significant development of the past twelve months for Ethereum was the Dencun upgrade, which went live on the Ethereum mainnet in March 2024. Understanding what it did - and what tradeoff it created - is important for evaluating the current supply dynamics around ETH.
The centrepiece of Dencun was a mechanism called proto-danksharding. In simple terms, it introduced a new type of data storage on the blockchain called "blobs" - temporary data bundles that layer-2 networks can use to post transaction records to Ethereum without permanently occupying the main chain's storage. Because this data can be deleted after approximately 18 days rather than living on the blockchain forever, it takes up far less space per transaction. Less storage consumed per transaction means lower fees.
| Metric | Pre-Dencun (Before Mar 2024) | Post-Dencun (After Mar 2024) |
|---|---|---|
| L2 Transaction Fees | High - data stored permanently on-chain | Down 88% from peak |
| Arbitrum Daily Txns | <1 million / day | >2 million / day (2× increase) |
| Base Daily Txns | Below 1 million / day | >3 million / day at peak |
| ETH Burn Rate | Higher (more fee revenue burned) | Lower (less fee revenue burned) |
| ETH Supply Trend | Deflationary (burn > issuance) | Mildly inflationary (+0.1% since Mar) |
The tradeoff is straightforward: lower fees mean users transact more - and Ethereum's layer-2 networks have confirmed this empirically, with Arbitrum doubling its daily transaction volume and Base reaching over three million transactions in a day. But lower fees also mean less ETH is burned per transaction, which has shifted Ethereum's supply from mildly deflationary to mildly inflationary. The net annual inflation rate since Dencun is less than 1% - lower than gold or silver - and stakers can offset it entirely through the ~2.5% annual staking yield available even through centralised platforms like Coinbase.
We do not view this as a negative development. The Dencun upgrade is an acceleration of adoption: it made Ethereum materially cheaper to use, and the usage data confirms people responded. The slight reduction in ETH's scarcity economics is a reasonable price for a platform that is actually growing. The supply narrative was never what made Ethereum interesting anyway.
On-Chain Reality Check: What the Data Actually Says
We are strong believers in reading on-chain data before forming a conviction. Ethereum's blockchain is fully transparent - every transaction is publicly recorded and analysable. Here is an honest reading of what the key metrics show heading into August 2024.
The picture that emerges from this data is genuinely mixed. Layer-1 daily transactions have flatlined at around 1–1.5 million since 2021 - a level they reached during the DeFi boom of 2020 and have not materially exceeded since. Active wallet addresses similarly sit in a range of 250,000 to 500,000 without clear upward momentum. If you evaluate Ethereum purely on this layer-1 usage data, the story looks like a platform that has not grown meaningfully in years.
The more optimistic - and we believe more accurate - reading is that layer-2 networks represent the real growth vector. The Dencun upgrade was explicitly designed to make L2 usage cheaper, and the March 2024 data confirms that it worked. The question is whether L2 growth will eventually translate into more demand for ETH itself as the settlement layer beneath it.
The ETF Catalyst: What Institutional Access Actually Changes
On July 23, 2024, spot Ethereum ETFs began trading on U.S. exchanges. It was the biggest regulatory milestone for Ethereum since the SEC's surprise approval of the Bitcoin ETFs in January of the same year. For context: Bitcoin ETFs averaged $100 million in daily net inflows and helped stabilise Bitcoin's price during episodes of sell pressure, including the German government's multi-billion dollar BTC liquidation in July, which was absorbed by ETF demand within three weeks.
The key question for Ethereum is how large the institutional demand will be relative to the Bitcoin precedent. We have one data point worth anchoring to: existing global institutional demand for Ethereum-related exchange-traded products (excluding U.S. spot ETFs) runs at approximately 31% of the comparable Bitcoin demand. Galaxy Research has applied this ratio to the ~$17 billion in Bitcoin ETF inflows recorded in the first six months of trading to project roughly $10.5 billion in annual Ethereum ETF inflows - or about $900 million per month.
We view this as a reasonable base case, not a certainty. What we are more confident about is the structural mechanism: the ETFs create a new, permanent channel of demand from institutional investors and retail investors using brokerage accounts where buying ETH directly is either operationally cumbersome or prohibited. Pantera Capital disclosed a $100 million seed investment in the Bitwise spot Ethereum ETF - an early signal that sophisticated crypto-native capital sees this access channel as meaningful.
| ETF Provider | Product Name | Approx. Annual Fee | Staking Pass-Through | Notable |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BlackRock | iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) | 0.25% | None | Largest asset manager globally entering ETH |
| Fidelity | Fidelity Ethereum Fund (FETH) | 0.25% | None | Already launched in Canadian markets (FETH:CA) |
| Bitwise | Bitwise Ethereum ETF | 0.20% | None | Pantera Capital seed investment of $100M |
| Grayscale | Grayscale Ethereum Trust (ETHE) | 2.50% | None | $9.6B AUM - high fee creates outflow risk |
| Grayscale Mini | Grayscale Ethereum Mini Trust | 0.15% | None | Lower-fee spinoff to retain assets |
There is one short-term overhang worth acknowledging. The Grayscale Ethereum Trust (ETHE) held approximately 2.63 million ETH - worth roughly $9.6 billion - at the time of ETF conversion. Investors who bought ETHE when it traded at a 24% discount to NAV in April will likely take profits at par now. This potential early selling pressure from ETHE redemptions is the primary near-term risk to the ETF launch narrative, and it is the reason we are not calling this a trade to size aggressively at the moment of ETF debut.
Supply Mechanics: The "Triple Halving" and the Staking Effect
Ethereum's supply mechanics are more complex than Bitcoin's, and this complexity is frequently misunderstood in both bullish and bearish directions. Let us walk through how ETH supply actually works.
How ETH Supply Works - The Three Forces
To validators (PoS rewards)
EIP-1559 base fee destruction
Locked, reduces liquid supply
What the market actually trades
When network usage is high, the burn rate can exceed issuance (deflation). When usage is low - as after the Dencun fee reduction - issuance exceeds burn (mild inflation). The Dencun upgrade caused ETH supply to inflate by approximately 0.1% since March 2024, giving an annualised inflation rate below 1%. Stakers earn ~2.5–5% annually, more than offsetting this inflation. 28% of all ETH (33.1 million coins) is currently locked in staking contracts and not available in liquid markets.
The transition from Proof of Work to Proof of Stake in September 2022 - known as "the Merge" - reduced new ETH issuance by approximately 90%. Combined with the EIP-1559 burn mechanism introduced in 2021, this has been described by advocates as Ethereum's "triple halving." Unlike Bitcoin's mechanically fixed halving every four years, Ethereum's supply dynamics are demand-responsive - which makes them harder to model but also means the asset benefits directly from network usage in a way Bitcoin does not.
One practical implication for ETF investors: U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs are not permitted to stake the ETH they hold. This means ETF holders will not receive the staking yield - roughly 4–5% annualised - that direct ETH holders or liquid staking protocol participants can access. For investors who prioritise yield, direct ownership via a liquid staking service like Lido is superior to an ETF from a return-per-unit-of-risk perspective. For investors who prioritise simplicity, regulatory clarity, and accessibility within existing brokerage infrastructure, the ETF is the right vehicle.
Bitcoin vs. Ethereum: Two Different Bets
We are asked frequently whether investors should choose Bitcoin or Ethereum for crypto exposure. Our answer is that it is the wrong question. These are different assets with fundamentally different investment theses, and conflating them leads to poor allocation decisions.
BlackRock's Jay Jacobs framed it well: Bitcoin's value proposition lies in its simplicity and credibility as a non-sovereign monetary instrument. Ethereum's appeal is its flexibility and potential to underpin a wide range of decentralised applications. These are complementary assets, not competing ones. A portfolio that holds both is making two distinct bets - one on money, one on the internet's next computing layer.
The ETH/BTC price ratio has drifted lower since the Merge in September 2022, meaning Bitcoin has outperformed Ethereum in relative terms over that period. Historically, extended periods of Bitcoin outperformance have been followed by Ethereum catching up - and often overshooting. The upcoming spot ETF launch, the Dencun fee reduction, and Ethereum's significantly undervalued position relative to its 2022 highs may collectively set up that rotation. But we would not bet the farm on a specific timeline.
The Competitive Landscape: Are "Ethereum Killers" Actually a Threat?
No analysis of Ethereum is complete without addressing the perennial narrative that a newer, faster, cheaper blockchain will eventually displace it. Solana is the most prominent current candidate for that label, having significantly outperformed Ethereum in price terms since the Dencun upgrade and attracting attention for its high throughput and lower fees.
Our view: Solana is a serious, well-built platform. We use it. But we do not believe it displaces Ethereum as the dominant smart contract platform, for three interconnected reasons.
First, Ethereum's developer community is by far the largest in blockchain. The number of active developer teams building on Ethereum's core protocol and application layer dwarfs that of any competitor. This creates a compounding advantage: better tooling, faster security auditing, and a richer ecosystem of composable building blocks that new projects can leverage. Solana cannot replicate this with capital or marketing - it requires years of organic developer adoption.
Second, DeFi TVL and dApp volume data confirm that Ethereum's lead in actual economic activity is massive. Ethereum's 30-day dApp volume exceeds that of the next closest layer-1 chain by a factor of more than ten. When real money is deployed into financial applications, it predominantly goes to Ethereum.
Third - and the lesson of a decade of crypto markets - every blockchain tagged as an "Ethereum killer" has eventually either pivoted, stalled, or imploded. EOS, Cardano, TRON, and Terra were each briefly framed as likely successors. Solana is a better-engineered competitor than any of them, but the pattern of hype around the label should make investors cautious about the framing itself.
That said, we take competition seriously as a risk and we have included it explicitly in our risk register below. Ethereum's lead is large, but it is not permanent. The trilemma - decentralisation, security, scalability - remains unsolved at Ethereum's current scale. The continued upgrade roadmap is the main mechanism by which Ethereum maintains its competitive advantage over time.
Risk Register: What Could Go Wrong
We hold a position in ETH. We are biased in a bullish direction and we know it. The discipline of this section is to force us to articulate, as honestly as possible, the ways in which this bet could lose significantly. Investors should weight these risks carefully before sizing any allocation.
The most straightforward bear case is simply that Ethereum's applications never scale beyond a niche crypto-native user base. Active addresses have been flat for years. If mainstream financial services, gaming publishers, and ordinary consumers never meaningfully adopt blockchain applications, ETH's value proposition as a utility token evaporates. Institutional tokenisation projects remain the exception, not the rule.
Blockchain technology evolves quickly. A newer architecture could solve the trilemma more elegantly than Ethereum's layered rollup approach and attract developer migration. History shows first-mover advantage in technology platforms is not permanent - Microsoft displaced Xerox's innovations, Facebook displaced MySpace, and so on. Ethereum's lead is large but not irreversible. Solana's growth warrants ongoing monitoring.
The SEC dropped its Ethereum 2.0 investigation in June 2024 without charges - a meaningful positive. But the legal classification of ETH remains contested under the Howey Test. A future SEC or CFTC posture shift could revisit this, potentially classifying ETH as a security and materially restricting U.S.-accessible investment products. The ETF approval partially mitigates this risk but does not eliminate it.
Grayscale's ETHE held approximately 2.63 million ETH ($9.6 billion) at conversion. Investors who bought ETHE at a discount will likely redeem at or near par, creating selling pressure in the first weeks of ETF trading. This mirrors the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) outflow dynamic seen at Bitcoin ETF launch in January 2024. It is a short-term technical risk, not a fundamental one.
Upgrade Roadmap: What Comes After Dencun
Vitalik Buterin's publicly published roadmap for Ethereum is unusually transparent for a global technology platform. Understanding the phases matters because each represents a potential catalyst for both utility and investor sentiment.
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Completed - September 2022: The MergeTransition from Proof of Work to Proof of Stake. Reduced energy consumption by ~99.95%, cut new ETH issuance by ~90%, and laid the foundation for all subsequent upgrades. Created the "triple halving" supply dynamic.
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Completed - March 2024: The Dencun UpgradeIntroduced proto-danksharding (EIP-4844), reducing layer-2 transaction fees by up to 88%. Launched "The Surge" phase of Vitalik's roadmap, focused on scalability through rollup-centric architecture. Arbitrum and Base transaction volumes immediately spiked.
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Upcoming: EigenLayer RestakingRestaking allows smaller blockchains and applications to leverage Ethereum's security without building their own validator sets. EigenLayer is pioneering this. As more services adopt restaking, demand for ETH as economic collateral increases. Currently early-stage but growing rapidly.
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Upcoming: Gas-Free Stablecoin TransactionsPlanned integration would enable fee-less USDC transfers on Ethereum, directly competing with PayPal USD and Coinbase/Circle's USDC product. If implemented, removes one of the largest practical barriers to Ethereum-based payments at scale.
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Future: Full Danksharding and The Scourge / The VergeFull sharding will massively increase data availability, enabling significantly higher L2 throughput. Subsequent upgrades focus on validator decentralisation and statelessness - reducing hardware requirements for running nodes and making the network more censorship-resistant.
The convergence of the spot ETF launch, the Dencun upgrade's demonstrated impact on L2 activity, and the deep discount to its 2021 all-time high make this a genuinely interesting entry window. Ethereum has the most sophisticated developer ecosystem in blockchain, the deepest DeFi liquidity on the planet, and a credible technical roadmap. The ETF approval provides an institutional access channel that did not exist for prior cycles.
At the same time, we are clear-eyed about what we do not know: whether DeFi will meaningfully penetrate traditional finance, whether gaming publishers will adopt NFT mechanics at scale, and whether Ethereum can maintain its competitive lead as Solana and other platforms continue to develop. The on-chain active-user data tells a story of a platform that has not grown its user base for two years. That matters.
Our view is that a moderate allocation - sized as a satellite position, not a core holding - is appropriate for investors who understand the technology and can hold through inevitable volatility. We would not recommend Ethereum to investors uncomfortable with the possibility of significant loss. For those who can tolerate the risk and commit to a multi-year horizon, our research supports a constructive position.
PolyMarket Investment, Research Team, August 2, 2024