Ethereum News Update: Institutions Move Treasury Assets to Ethereum Amid Declining Bitcoin Dominance
- BitMine Immersion Technologies (BMNR) purchased 44,036 ETH ($166M) during a market dip, now holding 2.8% of circulating ETH as the second-largest digital asset treasury. - Institutional demand is shifting from Bitcoin to Ethereum, with Ethereum ETFs surpassing Bitcoin's in quarterly inflows for the first time in 2025. - Market reactions show divergence: Q3 ETF inflows reached $9.6B, but October saw $555M in outflows, highlighting contrasting institutional and retail behaviors. - Ethereum's price remains
Ethereum (ETH) is once again catching the eye of institutional investors as
BitMine’s chairman, Thomas Lee, explained that the company’s approach is influenced by improving trade relations between the U.S. and China, as well as a normalization of ether derivatives open interest to levels seen earlier in the year, as detailed by Yahoo Finance. The firm’s total assets stand at $14.2 billion, which includes $305 million in unrestricted cash and smaller investments in Bitcoin and
Market reactions to these moves have been varied. While Ethereum ETFs attracted $9.6 billion in new investments in Q3 2025, spot ETFs experienced two consecutive weeks of $555 million in outflows during October, as noted by
From a technical perspective, Ethereum is at a pivotal point. The price has remained above $4,000 but is still facing resistance at $4,270. Analysts suggest that a move above $4,250 could spark a rally toward $5,270–$5,940, while failing to break through may lead to a drop back to $3,700, as reported by Yahoo Finance. Institutional engagement has strengthened this outlook, with ether derivatives open interest jumping 11.7% in just 24 hours, according to Bitcoinist. On-chain metrics also reveal renewed accumulation by large holders, reflecting growing confidence in Ethereum’s future, as per
Zooming out, Ethereum’s role in the market continues to evolve. As institutions increasingly seek yield-generating assets and on-chain innovation, Ethereum’s applications in DeFi and layer-2 solutions are becoming more prominent, a trend emphasized by TradingView. This stands in contrast to Bitcoin’s primary function as a store of value, with Ethereum ETFs now drawing more capital than Bitcoin’s for the first time in 2025, according to the TradingView report.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Dogecoin News Today: Contrasting Paths: Dogecoin's Institutional Expansion Against Shiba Inu's Foundational Challenges
- Dogecoin gains institutional traction via T. Rowe Price's SEC-approved ETF, signaling growing confidence in meme coins with liquidity and community. - Shiba Inu struggles with structural issues: Shibarium's TVL fell below $1M, daily transactions dropped 99%, and utility deficits persist despite token burns. - Crypto markets shift toward utility-driven assets like AI compute and DePIN, leaving meme coins competing against projects with verifiable use cases. - SHIB's community pushes for AI integration but

Brazil’s OranjeBTC Shifts Strategy as Argentina Seizes $515M in Digital Assets

Ethereum News Update: Ethereum Value Drops Sharply While Institutions Increase $13.2B Investment Threefold
- BitMine Immersion Technologies, co-founded by Tom Lee, now holds 3.3M ETH ($13.2B), the largest public Ethereum reserve, signaling institutional confidence in its financial infrastructure role. - Ethereum ETFs saw $246M net inflows on Oct 28, with Fidelity and ARK leading, as total inflows reached $14.73B—5.76% of total ETH supply—despite recent volatility. - Ethereum fell 5.5% to $3,800 amid $81M ETF outflows, but institutions like SharpLink continue investing in Ethereum-based projects like Linea, show

U.S. and China Reach Temporary Agreement: One-Year Pause on Rare Earth Disputes Despite Continued Strains
- China and the U.S. reached a provisional trade truce, suspending rare earth export controls and reducing fentanyl-related tariffs for one year. - The agreement includes conditional pauses on new sanctions and Nexperia export bans, with annual renegotiation and lingering strategic vulnerabilities. - Lynas Rare Earths adjusted production amid uncertainty, while Nexperia's shipments resumed to ease automotive supply chain risks. - Market reactions remain mixed as the truce addresses immediate tensions but l
