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Ether Dips Below $3,100; Investment Manager Says Market Views ETH as 'More Risky' Than BTC

Timothy Peterson says ether ETFs have lost about 7% of cost-basis capital over five weeks, versus 4% for bitcoin ETFs.

Updated Nov 17, 2025, 1:53 p.m. Published Nov 16, 2025, 10:09 p.m.
ETh-USD 24-Hour Price Chart (CoinDesk Data)
ETh-USD 24-Hour Price Chart (CoinDesk Data)

What to know:

  • Ether fell below $3,100 for the first time since Nov. 4, with the token down 3.4% in the past 24-hour period as of 9:35 p.m. UTC on Nov. 16.
  • Timothy Peterson said ether ETFs saw withdrawals equal to about 7% of cost-basis capital over the past five weeks.

Ether traded below $3,100 on Sunday during a broader pullback in digital assets. The token was recently near $3,066 at 9:36 p.m. UTC, down 3.4% over the past 24 hours. It briefly fell through the $3,100 level on Bitstamp at about 4 p.m. UTC, marking its first break beneath that threshold since Nov. 4, based on data from TradingView.

ETH-USD 24-Hour Price Chart (TradingView)
Ether falls below $3,100 for the first time since Nov. 4. (TradingView)
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Timothy Peterson, an investment manager and digital asset researcher at Cane Island Alternative Advisors, said spot ether ETFs posted net outflows in four of the past five weeks, totaling roughly 7% of the cost-basis capital invested in the products. He said bitcoin ETFs saw about 4% withdrawn over the same period, a smaller share that he believes indicates investors currently view ether as the riskier asset.

Cost-basis capital represents the total amount of money originally committed to an ETF, separate from gains or losses accumulated after purchase. The measure reflects how much foundational capital long-term participants have contributed to a fund. When redemptions rise as a share of this original investment base, analysts interpret it as an erosion of conviction among established holders rather than short-term positioning changes.

Because the metric focuses on investors’ initial commitments, it can provide a clearer read on sentiment than headline inflow and outflow data, which can be affected by week-to-week volatility.

Traders will now be watching whether ether’s ETF outflows ease or continue in the coming weeks, and how the token trades around key levels after Sunday’s move below $3,100. Future flow data and price action are likely to show whether the sentiment gap Peterson highlighted between ether and bitcoin persists.

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