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Will Ethereum Foundation’s $93M stake help ETH mirror Bitcoin’s 2020 run?
Scarcity has always been one of the strongest market drivers for risk-on moves.
That said, it’s rarely an instant catalyst. The process takes time, tests patience, and forces the market to prove conviction. In other words, scarcity doesn’t immediately impact price action. Instead, it quietly builds a support base until real demand steps in. That’s usually when markets transition into parabolic runs.
A clear example is Bitcoin’s [BTC] 2020 cycle. The Bitcoin halving cut new BTC issuance from 12.5 to 6.25 BTC per block, tightening supply. Around the same time, Strategy [MSTR] started accumulating BTC, while global central banks flooded markets with liquidity after the COVID-19 shock. Now, market participants are speculating that Ethereum [ETH] may be setting up along a similar path.
Source: TradingView (BTC/USDT)
Technically, if ETH mirrors this setup, the structure supports a potential parabolic expansion.
In 2020, Bitcoin finished the cycle up roughly 305%, breaking into a new all-time high above $20k for the first time. The halving created the initial supply shock, but the real parabolic move started once large treasury bids entered the market and aggressively absorbed available supply, accelerating price discovery.
In this context, Ethereum’s consolidation around the $2k level starts to carry greater significance. The key question now is whether a similar supply dynamic is quietly forming beneath the asset. If so, could ETH replicate a Bitcoin-style 2020 parabolic expansion once markets shift back into a risk-on environment?
Ethereum’s supply crunch builds ahead of a risk-on shift
Looking at Ethereum’s supply setup, it’s no surprise speculation around a BTC-style rally is starting to build.
According to on-chain data, the Ethereum Foundation staked another $93 million worth of ETH, bringing its total staked holdings to roughly $139 million in under a week. Technically, the move coincided with ETH’s 3.53% weekly rally, helping price reclaim the $2k level. However, the trend goes beyond a single participant.
Data from Validator Queue shows Ethereum’s total staked supply reaching a new all-time high of 38.5 million ETH. That’s about 31.67% of circulating supply. Notably, despite March’s risk-off conditions, nearly 1.5 million ETH were added to staking during the month, reinforcing the ongoing supply-tightening narrative.
Source: Validator Queue
Against this backdrop, Ethereum’s technical resilience doesn’t appear to be a fluke.
Instead, with a structural supply shock building underneath, ETH’s consolidation around the $2k level increasingly looks like accumulation rather than weakness, suggesting the market may be forming a base ahead of the next expansion phase once treasury bids return.
Consequently, if broader market conditions flip back to risk-on, Ethereum tracking a Bitcoin-style 2020 move begins to look increasingly plausible.
Final Summary