
Bloomberg Intelligence data shows the average spot Ethereum ETF investor is sitting on a 43% unrealised loss, with an estimated cost basis of $3,500 and ETH now trading near $1,950. That is more than double the 21% drawdown suffered by Bitcoin ETF holders.
Despite $5.3 billion in paper losses, ETF outflows have been surprisingly modest—net inflows have only shrunk from $15 billion to below $12 billion—suggesting holders are refusing to capitulate. The question is not whether they can endure another 20% drop; it is whether $3,500 becomes a selling ceiling when recovery finally arrives.
When the first batch of spot Ethereum ETFs began trading in July 2024, the mood was cautiously optimistic. Ether was hovering near $3,400, institutional interest was building, and the marketing machines of BlackRock, Fidelity, and Bitwise were in full swing. Fast‑forward eighteen months, and that optimism has been replaced by a much colder reality.
Bloomberg Intelligence ETF analyst James Seyffart delivered the blunt assessment on February 12: “Ethereum ETF holders are sitting in a worse position than their Bitcoin ETF brethren. It’s a painful proposition.”
The numbers justify the sobriety. Seyffart estimates that the average cost basis for spot ETH ETF buyers is approximately $3,500. With Ether changing hands at $1,950, the drawdown stands at roughly 44%. For Bitcoin ETFs, the estimated average entry is $84,000, while BTC trades near $66,000—a 21% decline. The ETH cohort has lost more than twice as much, in percentage terms, as the BTC cohort.
To grasp the scale of the destruction, apply the 44% drawdown to the roughly $12 billion of net inflows still held in ETH ETFs. The resulting paper losses amount to approximately $5.3 billion.
Total assets under management in spot Ethereum ETFs have collapsed from a peak of $30.5 billion in October 2025 to just $11.27 billion today. That $19 billion evaporation is a mix of price depreciation and capital exit. Notably, net outflows account for only about $3 billion of that decline—the rest is simply the market marking positions lower.
By comparison, spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen their asset value halve from $170 billion to $85.76 billion over the same period. Yet net outflows from BTC ETFs are roughly $2 billion year‑to‑date, and only about 6% of total Bitcoin ETF assets have exited during the entire drawdown, according to senior Bloomberg analyst Eric Balchunas.
The conclusion is counter‑intuitive but undeniable: despite suffering deeper wounds, Ethereum ETF investors have displayed a level of “diamond hands” that rivals, and arguably exceeds, their Bitcoin counterparts.
The conventional explanation for the divergence is simple: Ethereum is more volatile than Bitcoin, and its drawdowns are historically steeper. But the ETF lens adds a second, less understood layer.
Bitcoin ETFs launched in January 2024 after a decade of regulatory resistance, capturing pent‑up demand from institutions that had been waiting on the sidelines. Ethereum ETFs followed six months later, after the SEC approved a rule change that caught many by surprise. The approval was swift, but the capital was not as patient.
Many ETH ETF inflows occurred during the second half of 2024 and early 2025, when Ether traded between $3,200 and $4,000. The average entry price of $3,500 reflects that concentration. Institutional buyers did not have the luxury of a multi‑year accumulation window; they were largely forced to deploy when the product became available, at prices that now look painfully high.
Bitcoin ETF investors, by contrast, enjoyed a longer on‑ramp. Some bought near the all‑time high of $73,000 in March 2024, but many accumulated during the consolidation phases that followed. The $84,000 average cost basis, while underwater, is only 21% below current levels—a manageable loss for most institutional allocators.
Seyffart’s cost‑basis estimate carries a hidden implication. If and when Ether reclaims $3,500, the average ETF holder will finally return to break‑even. That moment, if it arrives, will test the cohort’s resolve more severely than the drawdown itself.
Investors who have endured a 44% loss are not necessarily eager to rotate into other assets at the first sign of recovery. But portfolio construction rules, risk limits, and simple human psychology often dictate that positions are reduced once they stop losing money. A rally back to $3,500 could thus generate significant selling pressure—exactly the dynamic that capped Bitcoin’s recovery after it approached the $60,000–$65,000 zone in late 2025.
The ETF structure accelerates this behaviour. There are no lock‑ups, no transfer delays, no tax friction beyond standard capital gains. An advisor managing a multi‑asset portfolio can trim an ETF position in seconds and redirect the proceeds into equities or fixed income. If a large cluster of holders all arrived at similar entry prices, their simultaneous desire to de‑risk could form a formidable resistance wall.
Tom Lee, chairman of BitMine, pointed out on X that Ethereum has suffered a drawdown of 60% or worse in seven of the past eight years. The only exception was 2023, a bear‑market recovery year. In 2025, ETH fell 64% during the Trump‑tariff volatility. In 2022, it plunged more than 80%. In 2018, it lost 95% of its value.
The current 44% drawdown, while severe for ETF holders accustomed to equity‑like volatility, is actually mild by Ethereum’s own historical standards. The question is whether the new class of ETF investors—many of whom entered crypto through a regulated wrapper precisely to avoid such chaos—will tolerate a repeat of 2022‑style carnage.
Early evidence suggests they are more resilient than expected. During the March 2025 selloff that pushed Ether to $1,800, ETH ETFs recorded only about $1 billion in cumulative outflows. The current drawdown has extracted roughly $3 billion. That is not nothing, but it is far from a wholesale retreat.
Daily flow data for Ethereum ETFs has oscillated between red and green throughout February. On February 10, the complex posted a $13.8 million net inflow. The very next day, it bled $129.1 million, led by outflows from Fidelity’s FETH and BlackRock’s ETHA.
This stop‑start pattern suggests indecision rather than conviction. Capital is exiting, but not in a single, cascading wave. Some investors are de‑risking; others are adding exposure at lower prices. The net result is a modest reduction in cumulative inflows—from roughly $15 billion at the peak to below $12 billion today.
Macro newsletter Ecoinometrics characterised the current environment as a “bear‑market regime,” not a temporary correction. The 30‑day rolling average of ETF flows has been negative for most of the past three months, a persistence that signals structural outflows rather than tactical positioning.
Yet even in this regime, the bulk of the original inflows remain parked. Seyffart’s estimate implies that only about 20% of the capital that entered ETH ETFs has since exited. The other 80% is sitting through the pain, waiting.
Options markets are currently pricing significant downside protection. The heaviest volumes of put options are concentrated at strike prices of $1,600 and $1,900, indicating that institutional hedgers anticipate a potential retest of recent lows.
A Singapore‑based crypto trading desk noted that ETH could form a base ahead of Friday’s U.S. inflation print, which may influence Federal Reserve rate expectations. They also observed that BitMine has continued accumulating ETH, helping to “steady the narrative.”
But if the 2026 bear market follows the 2022 playbook, the bottom may not arrive until Ether trades in the $1,000–$1,200 range. That would imply another 40% decline from current levels—and an average ETF drawdown approaching 70%. Whether the remaining $12 billion of ETH ETF inflows survives such a test is the single biggest question facing Ethereum’s institutional adoption story.
The $3,500 recovery test. If Ether rallies back toward its average cost basis, watch for an acceleration of outflows. That level is more likely to be resistance than support.
The $1,800 retest. A clean break below $1,800 with corresponding ETF outflows would signal that the remaining holders are finally capitulating. Absent that, the current range may hold.
The Bitcoin correlation. ETH has recently traded in lockstep with BTC. A decoupling to the downside would be a bearish signal specific to Ethereum; a decoupling to the upside would indicate ETF‑driven differentiation.
Institutional commentary. Statements from major ETF issuers or large holders like BitMine can move sentiment. So far, the largest players have remained publicly supportive.
The Ethereum ETF experiment was never supposed to be smooth. The product arrived later, at higher prices, and into a market that was already beginning to cool. That its investors have absorbed a 44% decline without mass exodus is, in its own way, remarkable. It suggests that the institutional bid for Ethereum is real—not just speculative hot money.
But resilience has limits. Every additional percentage point of drawdown erodes the conviction of the marginal holder. If Ether slides toward $1,600 and then $1,200, the polite outflows of today will become a rout. The ETF wrapper, designed to make crypto accessible, will also make that exit instantaneous.
For now, the diamond hands hold. February’s inflation data will determine whether they continue to hold—or whether $3,500 becomes a tombstone rather than a launchpad.
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