Based on Wednesday's data, ETH's performance remains relatively stable. Although there is still net capital inflow, the momentum is not as aggressive as BTC's. Compared to Tuesday's situation, the recent net inflow has actually decreased, which is worth noting.
At the institutional level, a similar cooling trend is also evident—except for BlackRock, which maintains strong purchasing power, other institutions have seen a decline in trading activity. However, there is a detail here: although BlackRock continues to accumulate, if we compare its current holdings with the historical high of ( in October last year when it surpassed 4 million coins ), there is still about a 12% gap. This also indirectly reflects that even leading institutions are experiencing a slowdown in accumulation speed at this stage.
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WhaleWatcher
· 01-18 23:19
ETH is a bit weak this time, with net inflow shrinking, which is indeed not very good.
Blackstone isn't as aggressive anymore; institutions are generally cooling down, and we're still far from the top.
Wait, BlackRock needs a 12% increase to return to its all-time high? That means they haven't had enough yet.
Major institutions are slowing down, so how should retail investors play... feeling a bit hesitant.
BTC is aggressive while ETH underperforms, is the divergence starting again?
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ETHReserveBank
· 01-18 13:15
ETH is falling behind again, this pace feels a bit off.
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BankruptcyArtist
· 01-16 00:10
Still rehashing old news, just accept ETH like this
BTC eats meat, ETH drinks soup, even BlackRock is starting to slow down. How else can we play this?
The net inflow shrinking has been obvious for a while; institutions are all on the sidelines
BlackRock is 12% short of full coverage? So big players are just waiting for the bottom
ETH remains stable, it's just consolidating
Shrinkage is normal, don't get your hopes up
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ChainDetective
· 01-16 00:10
Is it shrinking again? This wave of ETH is a bit boring
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BTC is out there expanding territory, ETH is just idling nearby
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Even BlackRock hasn't fully committed, and you still dare to chase?
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Net inflow has decreased, what are they waiting for?
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Institutions are slowing down, retail investors are still rushing? That's a bit cautious
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What does a 12% gap indicate? Does no one really believe in it?
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If this trend continues, it might just be a wave correction
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Is stability just a bottoming process? Or has it really stalled?
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Even BlackRock's buying power isn't that strong anymore, strange
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From Tuesday to Wednesday, it shrank again, this pace is a bit hard to sustain
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CantAffordPancake
· 01-15 23:59
ETH is still too weak, BTC is already howling, and it’s still dozing off there
The shrinking of funds is indeed a bit uncomfortable; it seems everyone has lost confidence
BlackRock is still holding on, but missing 12%, which indicates even the big players are slowing down, quite interesting
Institutions are starting to cool off, and retail investors should be even more cautious
Net inflow is shrinking, this signal isn’t very good; we need to watch and wait
A bunch of institutions are losing momentum, it feels like a correction might be coming
BlackRock is still buying but can’t buy much anymore, what does that mean... everyone is not as aggressive as before
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StablecoinEnjoyer
· 01-15 23:56
ETH this wave is a bit weak, net inflow is still shrinking, feeling like it lacks momentum
BlackRock hasn't even recovered to its all-time high, indicating that institutions are also watching on the sidelines. This pace is a bit...
BTC is still soaring wildly, while ETH seems to have fallen behind
Wait, a 12% gap? Institutions aren't rushing to buy the dip, and we're still here taking flying knives
With such a clear capital flow favoring BTC, shouldn't we consider running away?
Based on Wednesday's data, ETH's performance remains relatively stable. Although there is still net capital inflow, the momentum is not as aggressive as BTC's. Compared to Tuesday's situation, the recent net inflow has actually decreased, which is worth noting.
At the institutional level, a similar cooling trend is also evident—except for BlackRock, which maintains strong purchasing power, other institutions have seen a decline in trading activity. However, there is a detail here: although BlackRock continues to accumulate, if we compare its current holdings with the historical high of ( in October last year when it surpassed 4 million coins ), there is still about a 12% gap. This also indirectly reflects that even leading institutions are experiencing a slowdown in accumulation speed at this stage.