Ether investment products saw $296 million in inflows last week despite a market slowdown, as investors await clarity from the US Fed’s June rate decision. Ether-based investment products led inflows among cryptocurrency-based investment products last week, despite an overall slowdown in investor activity as markets await clarity from the US Federal Reserve. Ether (ETH) exchange-traded products (ETPs) received $296 million of inflows last week, marking their best week since the 2024 election of US President Donald Trump, according to a Monday report from CoinShares. Ether-based investment products now make up over 10.5% of the total assets under management (AUM) of all crypto-based ETPs. Read more
Ether’s price is up 46% in the past 30 days, and analysts say continued demand for spot Ethereum ETFs and strengthening structure may trigger a breakout. Key takeaways: Ether's price is up 46% in 30 days. ETH/BTC is up 30% in the past month, signaling stronger demand for Ether. Read more
Fading Solana hype and rising institutional inflows are boosting Ether's fundamental strength. Key takeaways: A gold-like five-point breakout structure is making a strong case for an Ether price boom. Ether is also repeating its 2016–2017 fractal and could rally to $5,000–$6,000 if the pattern holds. Read more
Ether led last week’s $286 million of net inflows to crypto ETPs, while Bitcoin investment products saw outflows of $8 million, CoinShares reported. Cryptocurrency investment products maintained their multi-week inflow streak last week despite significant selling pressure stemming from Bitcoin’s drop to $103,000. Global crypto exchange-traded products (ETPs) recorded $286 million of inflows in the week ending May 30, bringing a seven-week run of inflows to $10.9 billion, CoinShares reported on June 2. Despite the inflows, total assets under management (AUM) declined from the all-time high of $187 billion to $177 billion by the weekend amid market volatility triggered by uncertainty over US tariffs, said CoinShares’ head of research, James Butterfill. Read more