In brief
- ETH sitting in smart contracts went from 11% in June to above 16% currently.
- Ether in exchanges went from 19,000 in August to under 16,000 currently.
- Smart contract usage plateaued in October, though remains near its all-time high.
The Ethereum ecosystem in 2020 has witnessed a DeFi explosion that has helped push the price of ETH up while launching potentially profitable new tokens. But now traders have to ask: What to do with all that ETH now that its price is going up and DeFi protocols have come back to life?
Their answer: Just keep doing the same thing.
According to Glassnode data, the amount of Ethereum held in exchanges has been declining since the end of July 2020. Meanwhile, the percentage of Ethereum deposited in smart contracts, where it can potentially generate interest in DeFi protocols, has been rising since June.
In the course of a few months, the supply of ETH sitting in smart contracts went from 11% to 17%, whereas the ETH in exchanges went from 19,000 ETH to 15,500.
Until last month, that is. October showed a slight variation: While ETH continued to leave the centralized exchanges, the number of deposits to smart contracts remained relatively stable; DeFi stopped growing.
Pedro Febrero, the founder of Bityond and researcher at Quantum Economics, told Decrypt, “What I suspect is happening is the same thing that is going on with Bitcoin: essentially, we’re noticing a growing number of coins being taken out of exchanges into private wallets.”
He continued: “Most likely, these entities have no interest in selling in the short-term.”
This, of course, impacts the markets since a decrease in supply can generate an increase in prices—as there is more competition among buyers. That’s what Chainalysis reported today is happening with Bitcoin.
But it’s not quite to the same degree. That’s because, while the percentage of ETH in smart contracts has plateaued, it’s still near all-time highs. According to Chainalysis, “Ethereum…is becoming more liquid, moving into wallets that not only trade frequently, but that are also quite new.”
In the last eight months, it said, “over 8 million ETH moved into liquid wallets less than one month old at the time of acquisition.”
Of course, traders may just be letting their ETH settle into DeFi smart contract long-term. Regardless, with the price of Ether reaching levels not seen since 2018, holders are fine with taking a break as long as the price keeps rising.
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed by the author are for informational purposes only and do not constitute financial, investment, or other advice.