The strength of any asset is often reflected in how it bounces back from high risk aversion. Ethereum appears to be playing this pattern in real time. Zooming out, ETH’s Q2 performance has lagged Bitcoin by about three times so far. This is its weakest relative period since the first quarter of 2025, when ETH underperformed BTC’s 11% decline by almost four times.
But during this same cycle, ETH’s Q2 rebound ended up outperforming BTC. In fact, during the third quarter cycle, Ethereum lost 66% or more, outperforming Bitcoin by more than ten times. So the question now is: will we prepare for a similar rotation again in the third quarter, especially as markets return to risk mode?
Technical signals are beginning to suggest this. After the early June sell-off, Ethereum showed relatively higher flows during risk days. A recent example from June 11 saw ETH close up 3.6% compared to Bitcoin’s 3.45%. It’s a small advantage, but this kind of consistent outperformance on peak days is often what you see in the early stages of the rotation.
Technical context and tight ranges
Add to that the broader technical context. ETH and BTC are trading in tight ranges around $1,500 and $63,000, respectively. Early signs of dip buying appear to be accumulating below prices. If on-chain data confirms ETH’s strength on the demand side, then the setup for a stronger Q3 rebound against BTC does not seem far-fetched.
Supply tightens with the return of risk-based flows
This year, the institutional positioning was the opposite of what many expected. Despite the macro FUD, ETF selling has remained a constant source of pressure rather than a one-off event. Since the October sell-off, Bitcoin has fallen approximately 45%, while ETFs have distributed over 108,500 BTC, equating to approximately $9.3 billion in net outflows. A similar pattern occurred in Ethereum.
Yet Ethereum’s on-chain data tells a different story. Despite the recent selling pressure, the supply of ETH on exchanges continues to decline. Coins are regularly transferred to ETFs, staking and long-term wallets. Currently, there are only 14.5 million ETH left on exchanges, the lowest level ever recorded.
Less supply, more pressure on demand
Simply put, there is less ETH available for buyers than ever before. This creates a much more tense supply context. Add to that the fact that Ethereum’s selling pressure appears to be starting to look exhausted. Historically, this is when sellers slow down and buyers start to come back.
If this trend continues, Ethereum could enter a much stronger position just as markets return to risk-on mode. This would make ETH’s recent strength against BTC look less like a short-term rotation and more like the start of a broader shift in market direction. For now, the third quarter pattern appears to be gradually tilting in favor of Ethereum.
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