Investors have pulled nearly $2 billion from Grayscale's Ethereum ETF (ETHE) since it transitioned from a trust, with the fund's value now at $6.7 billion due to declining Ethereum prices.
On Wednesday alone, ETHE saw $133 million in withdrawals, though this wasn’t its largest single-day outflow, which was $484 million on its debut.
In contrast, the Grayscale Ethereum Mini Trust (ETH) has seen a positive inflow trend, with $19.5 million added on Wednesday, bringing total inflows to over $200 million.
ETH offers a lower management fee of 0.15%, compared to ETHE’s 2.5%, positioning it as the most cost-effective Ethereum ETF.
Grayscale’s new Bitcoin Mini Trust (BTC), launched yesterday and has already attracted $18 million.
This fund, which also has a 0.15% fee, aims to offer a cheaper alternative to the existing Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) and alleviate some of the selling pressure on GBTC by reallocating some of its assets.
Ethereum is rapidly emerging as the institutional favorite, with new ETF inflow data suggesting a seismic shift in investor focus away from Bitcoin.
Ethereum (ETH) appears to be entering a breakout phase eerily reminiscent of its historic 2017 rally—but this time, the move is backed by deep institutional support and ETF inflows.
SUI, the native token of the Sui blockchain, is drawing attention following a major breakout on the charts—driven by surging total value locked (TVL) and growing anticipation around Bitcoin-native decentralized finance (BTCFi) infrastructure.
Tom Lee, managing partner and head of research at Fundstrat Global Advisors, recently outlined his bullish stance on Ethereum, linking it directly to the rapid growth of the stablecoin sector.