Articles
Bitcoin|Ethereum

Was Ethereum 'ultrasound money' a mistake? ETH down 65% vs. BTC since pivot

User Image

Por Anônimo

Criado March 10, 2026|3 mins de leitura
Main Image

Ethereum has failed to remain deflationary since the switch to Proof-of-Stake, as ETH's price has disappointed Ether investors, particularly against Bitcoin.

Ether (ETH) has dropped roughly 65% against Bitcoin (BTC) since Ethereum’s 2022 shift to Proof-of-Stake (PoS), casting doubt on the network’s “ultrasound money” thesis.

Lower fees and L2 growth have weakened Ethereum’s deflationary “ultrasound money” pitch.

Ether has lagged behind BTC because investors trust Bitcoin’s fixed supply schedule.

The idea behind “ultrasound money” was that Ether would become even scarcer than Bitcoin.

Supporters argued that Ethereum’s 2021 EIP-1559 upgrade, which began burning a portion of transaction fees, combined with the sharp decline in new ETH issuance following the 2022 Merge, would make Ether deflationary over time.

ETH’s new annual supply rate has averaged about -0.19% after the burn mechanism went live in 2021, according to Ultrasound.MONEY.

Since Ethereum’s shift to PoS in 2022, however, ETH supply has grown at an annualized rate of about 0.23%, though lower than Bitcoin’s current annual inflation rate of 0.85%.

However, Ethereum’s supply growth since the Merge undermines the promises of deflation. ETH turns deflationary only when mainnet activity is sufficient to burn more coins than the network issues to validators.

That condition has weakened. Ethereum’s average transaction fee is about $0.21 in March, down roughly 54% from a year earlier, according to YCharts.

Lower fees mean the Ethereum network burns less ETH.

Moreover, most of Ethereum's activity has moved to cheaper layer-2 networks. L2beat shows rollups handling 926 user operations per second (UOPS) on March 7, compared to just 22.36 on Ethereum’s mainnet.

While the shift helps the network scale, it weakens the burn-heavy conditions required to make Ethereum deflationary.

Ether price has underperformed BTC partly because investors trust Bitcoin’s fixed supply, according to analyst Handre.

Bitcoin’s strictly enforced 21 million coin cap and fixed supply schedule appeal to investors as it makes BTC more predictable in the longer term. This resistance to change makes Bitcoin stand out from the monetary policies of most altcoins.

“Every scaling debate, every upgrade proposal, every attempt to change Bitcoin's monetary policy has failed because the economic majority understands what they're protecting,” Handre said.

Related: Ether’s path to $2.5K may be trickier than expected: Here’s why

Ethereum, by contrast, is not as predictable when it comes to monetary policy, particularly now that ETH supply is growing modestly again.

The investors’ preference is visible in the United States’ ETF market. As of March, spot Bitcoin ETFs held more than $91.9 billion in assets under management, compared with about $12.1 billion for spot Ethereum ETFs.

Ether never delivered a convincing breakout in dollar terms either.

Between 2021 and 2026, ETH only marginally exceeded its previous all-time high near $4,800 before losing momentum, unlike Bitcoin, whose price doubled from the 2021 peak to the 2025 record high.

The underwhelming performance by ETH over the past five years suggests that reduced issuance alone was not enough to create sustained new demand.

Sentiment has also been pressured by periodic ETH sales linked to Vitalik Buterin and the Ethereum Foundation.

Public criticism from Culper Research, which said it was short Ether due to Buterin’s selling, has amplified the view among some traders that Ethereum’s insiders are distributing into strength rather than reinforcing long-term conviction.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision. While we strive to provide accurate and timely information, Cointelegraph does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information in this article. This article may contain forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Cointelegraph will not be liable for any loss or damage arising from your reliance on this information.

Source: CoinTelegraph


Outros artigos publicados recentemente

Bitcoin holds near $64,000 as US-Iran talks progress but crypto sits out the rally
Bitcoin holds near $64,000 as US-Iran talks progress but crypto sits out the rally

Bitcoin

sian stocks and tech climbed as the US and Iran agreed a roadmap to a final peace deal, sending oil ...

XRP briefly loses $1.14 support before buyers drive sharp rebound
XRP briefly loses $1.14 support before buyers drive sharp rebound

Trading Strategies

Heavy selling pushed XRP to its lowest level of the weekend session, but strong buying quickly erase...

Are perps swaps? A quick look at that CME suit: State of Crypto
Are perps swaps? A quick look at that CME suit: State of Crypto

Crypto Market Analysis

CME Group sued the CFTC on Thursday, alleging that the agency was wrong in how it approved Kalshi's ...

Dash eyes Philippines as market for crypto payments
Dash eyes Philippines as market for crypto payments

Crypto Market Analysis

Dash is assessing the Philippines for a crypto payments push as regulators promote easier business r...

Bitcoin price may hit $24K if US stock market crashes by 50%, analyst warns
Bitcoin price may hit $24K if US stock market crashes by 50%, analyst warns

Bitcoin

Bitcoin’s drop to $23,980 remains the worst-case scenario as weaker ETF flows and low US demand sh...

Bitcoin tipped for $66K top as trader flags 'suspicious' BTC price gains
Bitcoin tipped for $66K top as trader flags 'suspicious' BTC price gains

Bitcoin

Bitcoin pushed for a $64,000 reclaim despite the US-Iran war making a partial comeback and Binance s...