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Ethereum Primed to Outrun Bitcoin Again? Key Ratio Flashes Bullish Signal (With a Catch)

Ethereum Primed to Outrun Bitcoin Again? Key Ratio Flashes Bullish Signal (With a Catch)

Author:
Ambcrypto
Published:
2025-05-09 02:00:28
12
1

History loves a rematch—and Ethereum’s gearing up for another sprint against Bitcoin. The ETH/BTC ratio, that merciless metric traders obsess over, just triggered its first bullish crossover since 2019. Last time that happened? Ethereum ripped a 200% rally against the crypto king.

But before you mortgage your dog for DeFi degenery…

The catch? Macro sharks are circling. Bitcoin’s still the institutional darling when risk appetite tanks—and let’s face it, Wall Street’s ‘diversification’ strategy usually means buying BTC and pretending they understand hash rates. Ethereum’s tech edge (hello, zk-rollups) might not matter if the SEC suddenly remembers it exists.

Bottom line: The chart says ‘go,’ but the game’s rigged with bigger variables. Trade accordingly—and maybe keep some dry powder for when the inevitable ‘ETF rejection’ headline tanks everything.

eth btc

Source: X

This divergence suggested that history may be indicating ETH upside, but its reversal WOULD not necessarily follow the same aggressive trajectory unless the fundamentals became better.

Investors might be able to hedge on-chain signals with present market realities before searching for another ETH-dominated altseason.

What could hinder ETH’s outperformance of BTC?

Ethereum’s supply recently surpassed 120.7 million ETH, reaching a new all-time high.

This increase in supply signals potential selling pressure, especially without consistent burning activity or strong demand absorption.

In past cycles, supply tightening helped drive price growth, but this time, inflationary pressure could limit ETH’s upside compared to Bitcoin, as scarcity weakens.

With burned fees dropping significantly, ETH’s total supply is no longer decreasing.

eth

Source: CryptoQuant

Moreover, network usage has also been largely stagnant since 2021. Key metrics like active addresses and number of transactions have not had sustainable growth. This meant user adoption and utility were plateauing.

With no on-chain activity explosion, it suggested ETH had minimal natural demand drivers that could lead to ETH outperformance against BTC in previous cycles.

On the investor front, institutional-grade and yield-bearing demand for ETH was showing signs of abating. Staked ETH increased at a slower rate, and ETFs and funds were holding fewer tokens.

Source: CryptoQuant

Under diminishing institutional confidence and uninspiring retail enthusiasm, Ethereum might not be able to replicate its previous outperformance against Bitcoin unless new catalysts emerge to reverse these structural drags.

Can massive outflows ignite a rebound?

Meanwhile, Ethereum last saw over 85,000 ETH withdrawn from Binance in one of the largest recent withdrawals. Historically, such giant withdrawals have commonly been preceded by bullish price moves due to low sell-side liquidity.

As soon as ETH regained the $1,900 threshold, this also sparked questions about whether whales were stocking up for the rebound.

The fewer tokens found in exchanges, the lower the selling pressure must be, and that could provoke a supply squeeze.

ethereum

Source: X

But not all the big outflows assure a rally—some are just havens during uncertainty. The next few days might be critical in establishing whether this is an accumulation or merely caution.

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