Ethereum exchange reserves fall to 14 mln – Is ETH’s 2025 bull run set to repeat?
Record-low ETH supply meets improving risk appetite - Is Ethereum set to outperform Bitcoin in Q3?
The strength of any asset really shows in how it bounces after a strong risk-off move.
Ethereum seems to be playing that setup in real time. Zooming out, ETH’s Q2 performance so far has lagged Bitcoin by roughly 3x, marking its weakest relative stretch since Q1 2025, when ETH underperformed BTC’s 11% drawdown by nearly 4x.
That said, in that same cycle, ETH’s Q2 rebound ended up outperforming BTC. In fact, in the Q3 cycle, Ethereum ripped 66%+, outperforming Bitcoin by over 10x. So the question is: Are we setting up for a similar rotation again in Q3, especially as markets flip back to risk-on?

Technicals are starting to hint at it.
After the early June sell-off, Ethereum [ETH] has shown relatively stronger flows during risk-on days. A recent example: On the 11th of June, ETH closed up 3.6% vs. Bitcoin’s [BTC] 3.45%.
It’s a small edge, but that kind of consistent outperformance on up days is often what you see in the early stages of rotation.
Add to that the broader technical backdrop. ETH and BTC are chopping in tight ranges around $1.5k and $63k, and you start seeing early signs of “dip-buying” building underneath price.
If on-chain data confirms ETH’s strength on the demand side, the setup for a stronger Q3 bounce vs. BTC doesn’t look far-fetched.
Ethereum supply tightens as risk-on flows return
Institutional positioning this year has been the opposite of what many expected.
Despite macro FUD, ETF selling has remained a consistent source of pressure rather than a one-off event. Since the October sell-off, Bitcoin has fallen roughly 45%, while ETFs have distributed over 108.5k BTC, equivalent to around $9.3 billion in net outflows.
A similar pattern has played out in Ethereum.
Yet Ethereum’s on-chain data tells a different story. Despite the recent selling pressure, ETH supply on exchanges continues to trend lower as coins are steadily moved into ETFs, staking, and long-term wallets.
As the chart below shows, only 14.5 million ETH remains on exchanges right now, the lowest level on record.

Simply put, there is less ETH available for buyers than ever before, creating a much tighter supply backdrop. Add to that the fact that Ethereum’s selling pressure is starting to look exhausted, a point where sellers have historically begun to slow down and buyers start stepping back in.
If that pattern holds, Ethereum could be entering a much stronger position just as markets shift back into risk-on mode. That 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 leadership.
For now, the Q3 setup therefore appears to be gradually tilting in Ethereum’s favor.
Final Summary
- Ethereum is beginning to outperform Bitcoin as markets shift back into risk-on mode.
- ETH supply on exchanges is at a record low, leaving less available for buyers.