Ethereum is quietly rewriting the rules of the game. Blue Origin has started accepting ETH payments for space tickets, and PwC is ramping up its crypto business—these signals point to one truth: the top-tier business institutions and traditional financial players are all voting with their feet.
Data from the ecosystem's underlying layer speaks louder. Developers have created record-breaking activity, deploying 8.7 million smart contracts in a single quarter; the liquidation volume of stablecoins has surpassed $8 trillion, making it a major hub for on-chain settlements. These are not virtual numbers.
But there's an interesting phenomenon here: Ethereum carries nearly 60% of the market's actual value and economic activity, yet its market cap share is only 14%. In other words, the ecosystem is operating at a rapid pace, but market perception hasn't caught up yet.
When the most innovative applications, the most cautious traditional institutions, and the most active developer communities are all betting on the same chain, what does this reflect? It may be a fundamental process of value re-evaluation. Will 2026 be the critical point when market perception finally catches up with ecosystem reality? This is a question worth pondering.
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OldLeekMaster
· 01-08 02:30
This data is way off. 60% of activity accounts for only 14% of market value. The market will have to catch up sooner or later.
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IronHeadMiner
· 01-07 18:09
60% of the value accounts for only 14% of the market cap. Doesn't that mean there's still huge room for growth? The market will wake up sooner or later.
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MysteryBoxAddict
· 01-05 03:57
60% of the value accounts for only 14% of the market cap. This valuation gap is huge; just wait to be re-evaluated.
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MEVSandwichVictim
· 01-05 03:56
Alright, this data indeed can't hold up anymore. The ecosystem is doing real work, but the market cap is locked, a typical case of cognitive bias arbitrage.
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MEVSupportGroup
· 01-05 03:54
The ecosystem is running, but the market is still sleeping. The 60% to 14% price difference is huge.
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GasOptimizer
· 01-05 03:51
Wait, 60% of the value accounts for only 14% of the market cap? How big is this price difference?
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AirdropworkerZhang
· 01-05 03:32
This data discrepancy is really outrageous; 60% of the activity accounts for only 14% of the market cap. It will have to be made up sooner or later.
Ethereum is quietly rewriting the rules of the game. Blue Origin has started accepting ETH payments for space tickets, and PwC is ramping up its crypto business—these signals point to one truth: the top-tier business institutions and traditional financial players are all voting with their feet.
Data from the ecosystem's underlying layer speaks louder. Developers have created record-breaking activity, deploying 8.7 million smart contracts in a single quarter; the liquidation volume of stablecoins has surpassed $8 trillion, making it a major hub for on-chain settlements. These are not virtual numbers.
But there's an interesting phenomenon here: Ethereum carries nearly 60% of the market's actual value and economic activity, yet its market cap share is only 14%. In other words, the ecosystem is operating at a rapid pace, but market perception hasn't caught up yet.
When the most innovative applications, the most cautious traditional institutions, and the most active developer communities are all betting on the same chain, what does this reflect? It may be a fundamental process of value re-evaluation. Will 2026 be the critical point when market perception finally catches up with ecosystem reality? This is a question worth pondering.