$ETH is rushing towards 8500 dollars, how far do you think it is?
Many people are still skeptical, but smart money has already taken action.
History keeps repeating itself: by the time you see the breakthrough with your own eyes, the best position has long been missed.
I just finished analyzing the on-chain data, and my back feels a bit tight: nearly 80 leading asset management institutions have stored 6.1 million ETH in cold wallets, worth 25.5 billion dollars.
They are also secretly operating through over 1200 sub-addresses, with an average cost locked in the range of 3700-4100 dollars.
While short-selling to stir up market panic, they are picking up low-priced chips from liquidations, and the “three-year lock-up” has been set in black and white — want them to sell? Not a chance.
Why are institutions flocking to grab ETH? A 4.3% staking rate easily outperforms dollar investments; relying on ETF premium arbitrage, they can steadily earn two rounds of “risk-free returns” in a year;
Now that traditional investments continue to depreciate, ETH's six-month gains are equivalent to ten years' worth of returns from investments, and many CFOs have recognized this.
Retail investors actually have just one reliable path: regular investment + staking + ETF premium to earn compound interest.
Buy ETH on fixed dates every month and deposit it into the staking pool; when the ETF premium exceeds 2.2%, execute the operation of subscription — redemption — selling spot, and reinvest the profits back into positions, letting the returns snowball.
Over the next 18 months, institutional ETH holdings are likely to surge to 10 million coins, and ETH's market capitalization exceeding BTC is no longer a fantasy, but something to look forward to.
The entry window is still open, but the longer you wait, the higher the cost will be. In the market, those who can survive and profit have always been the ones brave enough to reach out for opportunities.

