Thursday, June 4, 2026
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In the June 2026 crypto selloff, Ethereum has fallen harder than Bitcoin, and not by a little.

Summary

  • Ethereum has fallen about 32% in 2026, while Bitcoin is down roughly 11%, with the ETH/BTC ratio dropping to a 10-month low near 0.0283.
  • Strong demand from spot Bitcoin ETFs has helped Bitcoin hold value better than Ethereum, whose ETF market remains much smaller and has seen persistent outflows.
  • Analysts point to Ethereum’s higher risk profile, ETF weakness, whale selling, and growing competition from rival blockchains as key factors behind its underperformance.

On the worst days, Ethereum (ETH) dropped around 7.5% in 24 hours while Bitcoin fell about 5%, sliding below $1,800 as Bitcoin held above $62,000. Zoom out, and the gap is starker: Ethereum is down roughly 32% year-to-date in 2026 against Bitcoin’s roughly 11%, and it sits 55 to 60% below its August 2025 all-time high of $4,953. 

The clearest single measure of the divergence is the ETH/BTC ratio, which has fallen to a 10-month low near 0.0283, down more than 35% from its August peak and below its long-term moving average. 

This is not random. Ethereum falls harder than Bitcoin for a mechanical reason and a structural one, and the two compound each other. There is also a genuine bull counter-case worth taking seriously. 

Here is why ETH is the bigger loser in this downturn, and what would have to change for that to reverse.

The mechanical reason: higher beta

Start with the simplest explanation, because it accounts for a lot of the gap. Ethereum has higher beta than Bitcoin, which is a finance term for “moves more in both directions.”

The pattern is consistent across cycles. When Bitcoin rises sharply, Ethereum usually rises more. When Bitcoin falls sharply, Ethereum usually falls more. This is why ETH’s 24-hour decline exceeded 7% while Bitcoin’s was around 5% during the same window, and why the broader market fell just over 3% while Ethereum dropped more than twice that. ETH amplifies whatever Bitcoin is doing.

The reason comes down to where each asset sits in the risk hierarchy. Bitcoin is the most established crypto asset, the one with the deepest liquidity, the largest institutional ownership, and the clearest “digital gold” store-of-value narrative. Ethereum, for all its size, is one rung down the risk ladder. 

It is a bet not just on crypto as an asset class but on the success of a specific smart-contract platform and its ecosystem. In a risk-off moment, capital flees the riskier asset first and fastest. Ethereum’s smaller market cap and shallower institutional base mean there is less deep capital sitting there to cushion the drop, so when selling hits, the price falls further before it finds support.

That mechanical beta effect explains why ETH falls harder on any given red day. But it does not explain the bigger, more troubling pattern: that Ethereum has been losing ground to Bitcoin steadily for years, not just this week. For that, you need the structural reason.

The structural reason: the ETH/BTC ratio

The single most important chart for understanding Ethereum’s underperformance is not ETH’s price in dollars. It is the ETH/BTC ratio, which measures ether’s value against bitcoin directly and strips out the moves that affect all of crypto at once.

That ratio has been in a long, grinding downtrend. It peaked above 0.08 in December 2021. By June 2026, it had fallen to around 0.0283, a 10-month low, down more than 35% from its August 2025 high and sitting below its 200-week moving average. When the ratio falls, it means that even when both assets move together, Bitcoin is holding more of its value than Ethereum is. In a selloff, that translates directly into ETH bleeding faster.

The driver of this multi-year trend is the thing that reshaped crypto’s structure: the launch of US spot Bitcoin ETFs in January 2024. Those products opened a regulated, institutional-grade channel for capital to flow into Bitcoin, and they were a runaway success, pulling in tens of billions of dollars and giving Bitcoin a steady, structural source of demand that nothing else in crypto had. 

Ethereum got its own spot ETFs later, but they never attracted institutional flows at anything close to the same scale. The result is that Bitcoin gained a powerful new class of buyer while Ethereum did not, and the ETH/BTC ratio has been pricing that asymmetry ever since.

This is why the current selloff hits ETH harder than a simple beta story would predict. Ethereum is not just falling more because it is riskier. It is falling more because the structural demand that has supported Bitcoin for two years through its ETF complex was never there for Ethereum to the same degree, so when the broad buyer base retreats, ETH has less underneath it.

The ETF asymmetry is the whole story

Drill into the ETF flows during this specific selloff and the asymmetry becomes concrete.

Both Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs have been bleeding. On a single early-June session, US spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs together shed over $609 million, with Bitcoin products absorbing the bulk at around $519 million and Ethereum products losing about $90 million. 

On the surface, Bitcoin lost far more in dollar terms. But that is because the Bitcoin ETF complex is vastly larger. The Ethereum ETF complex holds roughly $12 billion in total net assets against the Bitcoin complex’s more than $90 billion. Measured against its own size, the Ethereum bleed is proportionally more punishing.

The streak data tells the same story. Ethereum ETFs have logged extended runs of consecutive net outflows, with BlackRock’s ETHA as the primary leak. One analysis flagged the ETH ETF picture as more damaging than Bitcoin’s precisely because the outflows represent a larger share of a smaller, more fragile buyer base. When the marginal buyer pool that supported a two-year bull framework shrinks, it matters more for the asset that had the smaller pool to begin with.

There is a deeper point buried in this. For most of 2024 and 2025, ETF inflows made every crypto dip feel mechanically buyable, because there was a steady, price-insensitive bid showing up through the funds. In June 2026, that plumbing is running in reverse for both assets, but Ethereum feels it more because its ETF bid was always thinner. The asset that benefited least from the ETF era on the way up is now getting less protection from it on the way down.

The other pressures specific to ETH

Beyond beta and the ETF asymmetry, a few Ethereum-specific dynamics have added to the selling.

Whale selling has been persistent. On-chain data through the downturn has shown large holders moving ETH onto exchanges, the classic precursor to selling, which adds direct supply pressure on top of the ETF outflows. Alongside that, traders have built up leveraged short positions against ETH, which amplifies downward moves: as the price falls, those shorts get more confident and press harder, and the mechanical liquidations during the broader crash hit ETH’s crowded long positions hard.

Competitive pressure is the slower-burning factor. Ethereum’s pitch is that it is the dominant smart-contract platform, but it has spent years fending off faster, cheaper rivals. Solana has taken a meaningful share of activity and attention, and a wave of other Layer-1s and Layer-2s keeps the competition intense. 

In a bull market, the “Ethereum is the settlement layer” narrative carries the day. In a downturn, investors look harder at whether ETH is actually capturing the value its valuation implies, and the competitive questions get louder. That narrative softness shows up as weaker conviction to buy the dip.

None of these is, on its own, the cause of ETH falling harder. They are accelerants layered on top of the structural beta and ETF story, and they help explain why the relief bounces have been shallow and quickly sold.

The bull case worth taking seriously

For balance, there is a genuine counter-thesis, and it is not just hopium. The most concrete version is the emergence of Ethereum treasury companies.

The standout example is BitMine Immersion Technologies, which has accumulated around 5.39 million ETH, roughly 4.47% of the entire supply, and launched an institutional staking platform. This is the Ethereum version of the Strategy-style Bitcoin treasury play: a public company hoovering up the asset and framing it as a strategic reserve holding.

The Bitmine chairman has argued that DeFi and AI could push Ethereum’s network value into the multi-trillion range, making current prices “future optionality at a discount.” Whether or not you buy that framing, the accumulation is real, and it represents a structural source of demand that did not exist in previous Ethereum cycles. It is, in a sense, an attempt to manufacture the kind of steady institutional bid that the ETFs gave Bitcoin.

The technology roadmap is the other piece. Ethereum’s Glamsterdam upgrade, targeting 2026, is expected to raise the network’s gas limit substantially, by some estimates up to 3.3 times, improving throughput and efficiency. 

Combined with the continued growth of Layer-2 networks settling on Ethereum, the bull argument is that Ethereum’s actual usage and capacity keep expanding even as the token price falls, which means the price is diverging from the fundamentals in a way that eventually corrects upward.

The honest caveat is that none of this has shown up in the price yet, and “the fundamentals will eventually win” has been the Ethereum bull refrain through a long stretch of underperformance. The treasury accumulation and the upgrade are real reasons the ETH/BTC downtrend could reverse. They are not evidence that it is reversing now.

What would have to change

If you want to know whether Ethereum’s underperformance is ending without guessing, watch a few specific things rather than the dollar price.

The ETH/BTC ratio is the cleanest single signal. As long as it keeps grinding lower, Ethereum is still losing the relative-strength battle and will keep falling harder than Bitcoin in selloffs. A sustained turn upward in the ratio, holding above its recent levels and reclaiming its moving averages, would be the first real evidence that the multi-year trend is breaking. That is the chart to watch, more than ETH-USD.

The Ethereum ETF flows are the second signal. The structural underperformance is, at its core, a demand-pool problem. If ETH ETFs turn from sustained outflows back to consistent inflows, especially into the staking-enabled products, it would mean the institutional buyer base is finally building at scale. That is the missing ingredient, and its return would address the root cause rather than the symptom.

The treasury accumulation pace is the third. If BitMine and any imitators keep accumulating ETH aggressively through the downturn, they could become the structural bid that Ethereum has lacked, the way corporate treasuries and ETFs became one for Bitcoin. If that accumulation stalls or reverses under price pressure, the bull case loses its most concrete support.

In the near term, none of this changes the basic reality: as long as Bitcoin is falling and the market sits in fear, Ethereum’s higher beta means it will keep falling harder, and the dollar price is hostage to Bitcoin’s direction. The relief bounces will stay shallow until either the broad market stabilizes or one of those three structural signals turns. 

The uncomfortable summary for Ethereum holders is that ETH is currently trading less like an independent asset with its own thesis and more like a high-beta bet on Bitcoin, and that is precisely the problem the bull case is trying to solve. Whether it succeeds is the question that decides if Ethereum keeps falling harder, or finally stops.

This article is for informational purposes and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile. The figures and analysis described reflect data available as of June 4, 2026. Always do your own research and consult with qualified financial professionals before making investment decisions.

Feature,Markets,Bitcoin,Ethereum,ethereum ETF#Ethereum #falling #harder #Bitcoin1780575893

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