Ethereum’s Pectra Upgrade Fails to Spark Price Rally Amid Macroeconomic Focus
Despite the successful completion of Ethereum’s Pectra upgrade, the cryptocurrency’s price remains stagnant at $1,830, reflecting a 40% decline from the previous year. market analysts note a recurring ’sell-the-news’ pattern following network upgrades, similar to the post-Merge slump in 2022. Investor attention has shifted to macroeconomic indicators rather than blockchain improvements, leaving ETH’s near-term outlook uncertain.
Ethereum Price Holds Steady Following Pectra Upgrade
Ethereum’s Pectra upgrade concluded smoothly, yet failed to catalyze upward momentum for ETH. The cryptocurrency remains stagnant at $1,830—a 40% decline from previous year levels. Market analysts observe a recurring pattern where Ethereum network upgrades trigger ’sell-the-news’ reactions, mirroring the post-Merge performance slump in 2022.
Investor attention appears fixated on macroeconomic indicators rather than blockchain improvements. The Federal Reserve’s impending rate decision dominates market sentiment, with CME FedWatch pricing a 95.6% probability of unchanged monetary policy. Technical enhancements, including 11 newly implemented EIPs, failed to override broader financial market influences.
NY Attorney General Sought SEC Declaration That ETH Is a Security
The New York State Attorney General’s office pressed the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to publicly classify Ethereum’s ether as a security during its 2023 case against crypto exchange KuCoin, according to documents obtained by Coinbase. Investor Protection Bureau chief Shamiso Maswoswe explicitly requested SEC intervention via court brief, though conceding the determination wouldn’t be legally decisive in New York’s action.
This behind-the-scenes regulatory pressure emerges as Coinbase releases a trove of SEC communications obtained through FOIA requests. The disclosure highlights ongoing jurisdictional tensions between state and federal regulators regarding crypto asset classification - particularly for Ethereum, the blockchain network underpinning the second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization.
Ether ETFs and Institutional Staking: Centralization Risks Loom
Institutional funds now control approximately 3.3 million ETH through exchange-traded products, representing 3% of circulating supply. This positions ETF holders to significantly impact Ethereum’s staking landscape—current holdings alone could boost staked ETH by over 10%, given that 27% of supply is already locked in validation contracts.
The emerging debate centers not on institutional capability to stake, but on execution risks. Approval of staking within ETH ETFs could trigger rapid validator centralization, as issuers likely default to third-party operators like Lido—which already commands 30% of staked ETH. Custodial bottlenecks may exacerbate this concentration, creating systemic vulnerabilities in Ethereum’s decentralized architecture.
NY Attorney General Urged SEC to Classify Ethereum as Security in KuCoin Case
Newly disclosed documents reveal the New York Attorney General’s office pressed the SEC to declare Ethereum a security during its 2023 enforcement action against KuCoin. The request came via email from Investor Protection Bureau chief Shamiso Maswoswe to SEC Chair Gary Gensler’s chief of staff, seeking an amicus brief supporting the classification.
While the SEC ultimately declined to take a public position, the correspondence highlights regulatory tensions surrounding ETH’s status. New York maintains jurisdiction regardless of classification, as state laws cover both securities and commodities.
Ethereum Spot Volume Decline Signals Potential Accumulation Phase
Ethereum’s spot trading volume has entered a pronounced decline, with CryptoQuant’s bubble chart visualization showing shrinking activity across exchanges. This slowdown coincides with a record high in accumulation addresses – a bullish divergence suggesting long-term holders are building positions despite price stagnation.
The ETH/USD pair remains anchored NEAR $1,842, down 55.15% from its December 2024 peak of $4,107. Market valuation metrics now flash contrarian signals: the MVRV Z-score hovering between 0 and -1 historically precedes rallies, indicating ETH may be carving out a bottom.