Aggregate 24-hour futures trading volume for Ethereum has surged to an impressive $49.4 billion, eclipsing Bitcoin’s $42.9 billion, according to analytics firm Coinanalyze. This notable uptick in speculative trading surrounding Ethereum starkly contrasts recent capital flows in the ETF market, where U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs attracted a considerable net inflow of $1.39 billion over the past ten days. In contrast, spot Ethereum ETFs experienced outflows totaling $668 million, indicating a rotational trend among institutional investors.
Experts suggest that growing anticipation surrounding key macroeconomic events this week has created a significant divergence between futures traders betting on Ethereum and those focused on Bitcoin. Stephen Gregory, founder of the crypto trading platform Vtrader, noted that such fluctuations are common and are particularly prevalent with discussions surrounding a possible half-point rate cut by the Federal Reserve. “I think we’ll close Q3 on an uptrend led by altcoins,” Gregory remarked, underscoring the shifting dynamics in investment strategies.
Coinanalyze data supports this view, revealing that the share of altcoins within total trading volume has climbed to 50% this week, after consolidating around 40% for several weeks. During the same period, Bitcoin’s dominance in trading volume plunged from 31% to 21%. Gregory attributed the substantial inflows into Bitcoin ETFs to a “FOMO trading” phenomenon, where newly empowered wealth managers rush to allocate capital into these vehicles.
This rotational trade has contributed to a notable performance gap, with Ethereum’s price increasing by 31% year-to-date, significantly outpacing Bitcoin’s 19% gain, as reported by CoinGecko.
While futures traders appear to have a growing interest in Ethereum and altcoins, data from the options market suggests a more cautious outlook. Adam Chu, Chief Researcher at GreeksLive, an options trading platform, pointed out that implied volatility—an indicator of future market expectations—is currently low. He indicated that market participants seem to have already factored in a potential 25-basis-point rate cut in the upcoming decision. “The overall market sentiment remains more favorable towards the fourth-quarter outlook,” Chu added, indicating a cautious but optimistic stance going into the final quarter of the year.


