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#深度创作营 Ethereum Falls to Emotional Cold Spot: This Crash Is Redefining Its Destiny!
Many people have been asking lately: "Is Ethereum done for?" "Why is it weaker than Bitcoin?" "Despite so many upgrades, why is the price continuously falling?"
When prices rise, everyone talks about the vision;
When prices fall, everyone talks about problems.
But the market is never a short-term emotion-driven race; it is a long-term structure-driven marathon.
If you only look at candlestick charts, you might think Ethereum is collapsing;
But if you look at history, mechanisms, and the current global liquidity environment, you'll see—this isn't just a simple decline, it's a deep structural revaluation. Today, we analyze Ethereum from multiple angles: history, logic, reality, trends, and the future.
Part One: History Has Never Been Kind to Ethereum
Many forget that Ethereum has experienced intense volatility since its inception.
- 2017 ICO frenzy, Ethereum became the funding fuel, prices soared;
- 2018 bubble burst, many ecosystem projects went to zero;
- 2020 DeFi Summer, locked-in value expanded exponentially;
- 2021 NFT craze pushed Gas fees to crazy levels;
- 2022 crypto winter, on-chain activity plummeted;
- 2023–2024 completed transition to POS, Shanghai upgrade unlocked staking;
- 2025 Layer2 expansion, main chain revenue started to be "diverted."
A pattern emerges: every surge in Ethereum's price is driven by "application narratives";
every crash is driven by "narrative retreat."
Ethereum is not just a store of value; it is an "application engine."
When applications are active, it prospers;
when applications cool down, it faces pressure.
Part Two: The Core of This Crash Is Not Emotions, But Structural Changes
Many attribute this decline to market sentiment. But there are three deeper reasons:
1. The prosperity of Layer2 is weakening the main chain's value capture.
In the past, Ethereum's core revenue came from Gas fees. More on-chain activity meant more burns and deflation. But as Layer2 solutions like Arbitrum, Optimism, and Base mature, a large volume of transactions migrate off-chain. What’s the result? The main chain becomes cheaper, Gas fees decrease, burns reduce, and the narrative of "ultrasound money" weakens. This is a typical "technological progress leading to valuation compression."
Layer2 success has reshaped the main chain's value capture model. It’s not necessarily bad, but it will cause short-term pricing shocks.
2. Staking mechanisms have changed the supply-demand rhythm
With the shift to POS, Ethereum enters the "staking era." Large amounts of ETH are locked, reducing circulating supply;
But at the same time, staking yields create a "selling pressure." When the market declines, unlocked staking rewards increase selling pressure, putting downward pressure on prices. In other words: POS enhances security but makes ETH more like a "yield asset." It is no longer just driven by narratives; it now has to compete with real yields. When US bond yields are high and global liquidity tightens, ETH’s attractiveness must compete with actual returns. This is very different from 2020.
3. Ethereum is being "re-priced"
Market perception of ETH has shifted:
In the past, it was the "innovation engine of the crypto world";
Now, it is viewed as "part of a risk asset portfolio."
When global risk appetite declines, high-volatility assets are the first to be hit. Many mistakenly believe ETH should keep rising like "the core asset of the tech revolution." But the reality is: it still heavily depends on global liquidity. As long as the dollar system contracts and risk assets are under pressure, ETH will find it hard to stand alone.
Part Three: Is It Really Weakening?
This is the key question. Here’s the conclusion:
Price weakening does not mean structural weakening. From on-chain data:
- Developer activity remains leading;
- Stablecoins, RWA, DeFi underlying liquidations still revolve around ETH;
- Rollup solutions have become an industry consensus;
- The modular trend has strengthened Ethereum’s base layer position, transitioning from a "high-growth asset" to a "layer-1 settlement asset." It’s like early internet browser companies eventually becoming operating systems. Growth slows, but its position is more stable.
Part Four: Three Key Variables for the Future
If you truly care about ETH’s future, focus on three things:
1️⃣ Will spot ETF approval happen? Once Ethereum spot ETFs scale, institutional allocation logic will change. This means ETH will no longer be just an on-chain asset but a tool for traditional capital markets. Once the capital structure shifts, volatility models will change.
2️⃣ How will the Rollup economic model distribute value? The future depends not on "how many Layer2 solutions there are," but on "how value flows back to the main chain." If Layer2 prosperity cannot feed back into ETH, main chain valuation will be compressed. If data availability and settlement costs become essential, ETH will regain pricing power.
3️⃣ Global liquidity cycle
The ultimate variable for all crypto assets remains global liquidity. When risk assets fully recover, ETH’s resilience is usually greater than BTC; when risk appetite declines, it becomes more fragile than BTC. This is its beta characteristic.
Part Five: Ethereum’s True Underlying Logic
In one sentence:
Bitcoin solves "value storage";
Ethereum solves "value flow."
It is an open financial experiment.
Its risks include:
- Technical complexity
- Intense competition
- Changing narratives
Its advantages include:
- Network effects
- Developer ecosystem
- Standard-setting power
Short-term price fluctuations are just market revaluations of future cash flows. Long-term value depends on whether the ecosystem continues to innovate.
Ethereum is unlikely to disappear easily, but it will go through a "valuation cooling period."
This crash is not the end, but a rebalancing of the structure.
If in the future:
- ETF expansion
- Value flowing back to Layer2
- Global liquidity improves
It will demonstrate resilience again.
But if:
- Application outflows persist
- Yield advantages weaken
- Capital structure deteriorates
It may enter a longer-term consolidation phase. This is a game of patience.
Conclusion
Markets never rise solely because of faith; they rise because of structural changes.
When prices fall, the most likely thing to lose is not money, but judgment.
The real question is not: "Will Ethereum rise again?" but "Has its underlying logic been broken?"
If the logic remains, volatility is just a process;
If the logic changes, the rise is just an illusion.
Understanding the structure is more important than predicting prices.
Understanding cycles is more important than betting on directions.
Ethereum will not easily give all the answers, but time will reveal them.