One of the key features of any L1’s strength is the dominance of stablecoins.
Currently this is especially telling. Volatility continues to put pressure on the technical setup of high-cap altcoins, and in that environment, fundamentals are ultimately the real differentiator.
Ethereum [ETH] seems to navigate this well. The market cap of stablecoins rose roughly 2% to $158 billion this week, marking the first meaningful increase since falling below $168 billion in the fourth quarter of 2025.

Source: DeFiLlama
What’s notable is that ETH still controls more than 50% of the $315 billion stablecoin market. With that kind of dominance, even small moves can cause ripples across DeFi, with altcoins often following the path of ETH.
That said, the bigger question is whether this network-specific liquidity actually boosts Ethereum’s fundamentals. On that front, Token terminal shows that ETH’s stake ratio has just surpassed 30% and reached an all-time high.
Complementing that momentum, Ethereum’s RWA capital is up 17% over the past 30 days, approaching its $14.8 billion ATH. Stablecoin activity is also increasing, indicating increasing liquidity and usage on the network.
Taken together, these signals point to a stronger Ethereum ecosystem. Interestingly, this corresponds to ETH/BTC trading over a period of several years, which begs the question: could ETH’s stablecoin flows cause a breakout?
The accumulation of BMNR highlights the power of Ethereum
Despite the recent backlash, BitMine’s condemnation cannot be ignored.
Even with technical weakness and market FUD, BMNR continues to hold its ground accumulate ETH. Although the BMNR is down about 27% so far this year, this move is clearly encouraging FOMO, as evidenced by Ethereum’s rising stake ratio.
The timing couldn’t be better. Bitcoin dominance [BTC.D] rolls over from the 60% ceiling, and ETH/BTC chops sideways. With growing liquidity and accumulation in the chain, conditions are ripe for a breakout.

Source: TradingView (ETH/BTC)
That said, it won’t be plain sailing.
Technically, ETH/BTC has failed to hold support three times since peaking at 0.36 in late 2025. In this context, reversing the current range of 0.29 from resistance to support will be crucial in determining the next move higher.
If this trend continuesa breakout past 0.3 would be driven by fundamentals, supported by stablecoins and growing accumulation, rather than just speculation, making this pattern one to watch for Ethereum’s next move.
Final thoughts
- Ethereum controls more than 50% of the stablecoin market, with rising stakes and RWA capital pointing to strong fundamentals on the chain.
- BTC.D is rolling, ETH/BTC is on a multi-year high, and a reversal of the 0.29 range could set the stage for a fundamentals-driven breakout above 0.3.
