Ethereum (ETH) has a history of defying expectations. In the 2020–2021 bull run, ETH skyrocketed more than 3,900%, climbing from under $100 to nearly $4,900 at its peak.
That surge was fueled by the rise of decentralized finance (DeFi), NFTs, and a wave of institutional interest. Now, as Ethereum enters a new cycle backed by stronger fundamentals and wider adoption, investors are bracing for a potential repeat.
This time, the story goes beyond retail speculation. Institutional demand is accelerating at record pace, with Ethereum ETFs, staking yields, and corporate treasury allocations reshaping the market dynamics.
In 2025, Ethereum-based ETFs have far outpaced their Bitcoin counterparts, attracting over $12.1 billion in assets under management.
Beyond ETFs, public companies now hold 3.4% of Ethereum’s total supply, with more than 3.5 million ETH staked in corporate treasuries. Household names like Ferrari and Deutsche Bank are integrating Ethereum into payments, tokenization platforms, and settlement systems.
Unlike Bitcoin, which remains a non-yielding store of value, Ethereum offers corporations yield-generating opportunities through 3–5% staking rewards, making it both a treasury asset and a productive instrument.
Ethereum’s long-term bull case rests on three pillars:
Ethereum now powers 53% of real-world asset tokenization, strengthening its role as the backbone of decentralized finance and digital settlements.
Ethereum is no longer just Bitcoin’s “little brother.” Its hybrid profile, a deflationary, yield-bearing, utility-driven asset, makes it a compelling choice for institutional and retail investors alike.
If the last cycle’s 3,900% rally was a preview, the next phase could reimagine how Ethereum is valued, not just as a cryptocurrency, but as the infrastructure layer in global finance.
Cover image from ChatGPT, ETHUSD chart from Tradingview