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Is Ethereum a No-Brainer Buy After the Bitcoin Halving?

Ethereum’s big moment has arrived with the launch of five spot ETFs.

Earlier this year, Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood stunned cryptocurrency investors by predicting that Bitcoin ‘s (BTC -2.85%) price would reach $1.5 million by 2027. Back in April, Wood believed that the recent approvals of the first exchange-traded funds (ETFs) based on Bitcoin’s spot price, more institutional purchases, and the then-impending halving of Bitcoin’s mining rewards (making it twice as hard to mine the cryptocurrency) would drive a stampede of bulls to the world’s largest cryptocurrency.

Wood also made some bullish predictions for Ethereum (ETH -8.89%), estimating its market cap could exceed $20 trillion by 2032. That would mean a market price of more than $166,000 per Ethereum coin.

Recent updates and analyses have added new perspectives on Ethereum’s potential. The Bitcoin halving is in the books, the initial spot Bitcoin ETFs have been on the market since January, and the first Ethereum ETFs followed suit this week. So what’s next, and is Ethereum still a good investment?

How is Ethereum different from Bitcoin?

Ethereum differs from Bitcoin in three important ways.

What are Ethereum’s main catalysts?

Ethereum is now the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency after Bitcoin. It’s also one of eight cryptocurrencies on the New York State Department of Financial Services’ “green list” of pre-approved cryptocurrencies. That relative stability led the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to approve spot Ethereum ETFs in theory, followed by a real-world launch on the Cboe exchange on Tuesday, July 23.

The SEC recently reiterated its view that Bitcoin was the only cryptocurrency that could be classified as a commodity instead of a security since it uses the PoW method, which arguably makes it comparable to physically mining precious metals. That’s consistent with Bitcoin’s original design document, which compares the power-hungry number-crunching system to mining physical gold. The SEC said the PoS method, while more environmentally friendly, makes the cryptos that use it more similar to derivatives contracts — so in the regulator’s eyes, Ethereum is more similar to a security than it is to a commodity.

But despite that, Ethereum’s periodic burning of its tokens could stabilize its price in the near term. The upcoming upgrades for the Ethereum Network could also make it even easier to facilitate financial transactions and develop more decentralized tokens and apps. More companies could also begin accepting the Ethereum coin as a payment option, and institutional investors could accumulate more of the crypto through easily accessible spot ETFs.

Market update

British multinational bank Standard Chartered has made bold predictions for Ethereum.

Four months ago, analysts from the bank claimed that Ethereum could hit $8,000 by the end of this year and $14,000 by 2025, contingent on the approval of spot Ethereum ETFs. Near the end of May, Standard Chartered doubled down on its price targets due to the potential for significant inflows into Ethereum upon ETF approval. The bank estimated that spot ETFs could drive fund inflows of 2.4 to 9.2 million Ether in the first 12 months. That works out to an injection of approximately $15 billion to $45 billion into the Ethereum ecosystem.

If Bitcoin reaches $200,000 next year, as Standard Chartered projects, the bank expects Ethereum prices to reach roughly $14,000 over the same period.

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