
In brief
- Standard Chartered’s Geoff Kendrick argues that Strategy’s $2.5 million Bitcoin liquidation marked a turning point for Ethereum.
- As Bitcoin’s price dropped, Ethereum registered one of Ethereum’s largest daily outperformance spikes since 2024.
- Kendrick believes that Ethereum’s current price is deeply disconnected from thriving network metrics.
When Strategy disclosed on Monday that it had sold Bitcoin, the move marked a counterintuitive turning point for Ethereum, according to Standard Chartered’s Geoff Kendrick.
Although the second-largest digital asset by market cap has lagged its oldest peer for months, investors’ reaction to Strategy’s liquidation created favorable conditions for Ethereum that could persist, the bank’s head of digital asset research shared in a Tuesday note.
After Strategy shaved its stockpile by $2.5 million, Ethereum notched one of its largest price moves against Bitcoin in years, Kendrick wrote. Since the start of 2024, Ethereum has registered better daily gains relative to Bitcoin, when it falls, just 23 times, he added.
By year’s end, Kendrick argues that Bitcoin’s dominance over Ethereum will weaken to levels not seen since September, or 0.04. Assuming that the larger asset remains unchanged, Bitcoin would be worth $67,300, while Ethereum would have risen 41% to roughly $2,700 from $1,900.
Kendrick noted that Strategy’s sale highlighted a distinct business model among Ethereum-buying and Bitcoin-buying firms. Companies can stake Ethereum to earn rewards by participating in the process of validating transactions, effectively generating revenue. Compared to Bitcoin-buying firms, that reduces the need for any sales, Kendrick wrote.
Last week, the investment bank projected a year-end target of $4,000 for Ethereum, contending that the digital asset’s price doesn’t reflect improving internal metrics. Kendrick compared the disparity to Amazon’s tumble amid a catastrophic end to the dot-com bubble.
Kendrick’s analysis specifically looked at the “ETH/BTC” ratio. The ratio peaked last year in August at 0.042 as Ethereum hit an all-time high of nearly $5,000, but historically, the asset created around the concept of smart contracts—which hold the code to power everything from tokens to decentralized apps and NFT projects—has trended relatively lower since 2022.
Kendrick wrote, however, that Ethereum is poised to benefit from Wall Street’s growing interest in stablecoins as modern money and tokenization as new market plumbing.
Ethereum’s grip in those sectors had been recognized by asset managers such as BlackRock. Kendrick has penciled in $40,000 for Ethereum by the end of the decade, while he expects Bitcoin to rise to $500,000 over the same period.
In crypto market cycles past, Bitcoin’s rally to all-time highs has been followed by a period of sustained outperformance for altcoins, a phenomenon known as “alt season.” Still, some analysts have poked holes in the longstanding dynamic, placing emphasis on a market structure for Bitcoin that has matured through the introduction of exchange-traded funds.
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