Ethereum (ETH) keeps sliding even as Wall Street courts it, with spot exchange-traded funds bleeding more than $1.5 billion this year while cheaper products line up.
Spot Ethereum funds have now logged six straight weeks of withdrawals, with cumulative outflows climbing past $1.5 billion since the start of the year. Ether traded near $1,834 on Friday before a market-wide selloff pulled it below $1,700. The retreat left its market value around $203 billion, far short of the figure bulls sketched when these funds first launched.
Morgan Stanley sharpened that contrast on Jun. 18, when it filed amended paperwork for a spot Ether fund set to charge just 0.14% a year.
The proposed rate, tied to a planned NYSE Arca listing under the ticker MSSE, undercuts BlackRock's 0.25% product and even Grayscale's discounted mini fund.
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The rock-bottom fee signals real institutional conviction, yet the flow data points the other way. Bloomberg analyst Eric Balchunas described the proposed charge as the cheapest for any Ether fund anywhere in the world. Buyers, though, have largely stayed put through most of 2026.
The space between Wall Street's product blitz and actual demand keeps stretching.
Analysts tie the weakness to Ether's leaky economics, as fees and activity drift toward faster layer-2 networks. Those rival chains now handle a growing share of transactions while sending little value back to the base layer. David Hoffman, a co-founder of crypto outlet Bankless, sold his entire Ether position this month and pointed to that exact problem.
Wall Street's own researchers strike a similar note, with a JPMorgan team warning in May that Ether is unlikely to recover its long lag against Bitcoin without stronger network activity.
The Glamsterdam upgrade, billed as Ethereum's biggest revamp since the Merge, also slipped to the third quarter, removing a near-term catalyst.
Ether's slump runs deeper than one rough week. The token has shed about 32% in 2026, while Bitcoin (BTC) has slipped only around 11% over the same stretch. The Ether-to-Bitcoin ratio recently sank to a 10-month low, a sign that capital keeps drifting toward the larger asset.
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