Impact of ETF and Treasury Companies’ Purchases on Ethereum Supply
As of mid‑August, the share of spot ETFs surpassed the 5 % threshold, while the accumulation by treasury companies accelerated. Standard Chartered’s recent assessment indicates that treasury companies have been accumulating a significant portion of the circulating supply since the summer, reaching levels comparable to ETFs. This scenario reveals a combined ETH share reaching approximately 8 % throughout the year via ETFs and treasuries.

From the end of September, aggressive buyers such as BitMine came to the fore, providing new momentum for the treasury companies’ front. Current data shows that the Ethereum controlled by BitMine rose to 2.83 million ETH, placing it at the top of the institutional Ethereum treasury companies league. This reduction in supply has caused the ETH reserves in exchanges to hit the lowest levels in recent years.
Liquidity, Pricing, and Risks
The contraction of supply acts as a structural catalyst pushing price discovery upwards. As the ETH/BTC pair approaches yearly highs, investor interest is reinforced by net inflows into spot products. While ETFs provide predictable custody and transparency, the long‑term buy‑and‑hold approach of treasury companies further limits the sellable supply in the market.
As strategic purchases increase, discussions around corporate risk management and dilution arise. VanEck highlights the potential dilution risks that issuance and staking dynamics might create in some scenarios. Nevertheless, current data suggests that ETFs and treasury balances will provide demand‑driven support for ETH’s price for the remainder of the year.
According to CryptoAppsy data, ETH was trading at $4,679 with a 2.35 % rise in the past 24 hours at the time of the article.

