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Crypto veteran Arthur Hayes sold millions in ETH and invested the funds in a basket of DeFi projects, primarily PENDLE, LDO, ENA, and ETHFI. Over the past two weeks, he reportedly sold 1,871 Ether tokens, worth approximately $5.53 million, and reallocated his proceeds to DeFi. He acquired nearly a million PENDLE tokens worth around $1.75 million, 2.3 million LDO ($1.29 million), 6.05 million ENA ($1.24 million), and 491,000 ETHFI, valued at approximately $343,000. Hayes isn’t new to ETH sell-offs; he also recently moved $2 million worth of ETH, about 682 ETH, to Binance. Hayes’ assets now mainly comprise DeFi and stablecoin tokens Arthur Hayes didn’t just sell ETH — he also transferred $2.52 million from exchanges into DeFi assets. Now, more than 60% of his portfolio is comprised of DeFi and stablecoins, with ETH holdings taking a backseat. Specifically, Hayes’ portfolio is most concentrated on PENDLE, with the token accounting for nearly half of the allocation. However, all three DeFi assets, PENDLE, LDO, and ETHFI, are still in a downturn, yet Hayes is holding out for a possible bounce. So far, his approach has inspired optimism in DeFi, although his Ethereum selloff has rattled some people. Moreover, Ethereum’s continued inability to reclaim $3,000 is dampening market sentiment. Ethereum is becoming the global settlement layer While Ethereum’s price is down, the network is being used increasingly by developers, according to Token Terminal data. During the fourth quarter, 8.7 million smart contracts were created. The analytics firm attributes the growth to RWA tokenization, stablecoin trends, and infrastructure development, saying, “Ethereum is quietly becoming the global settlement layer.” With layer-1 competitors, such as Solana, chasing high throughput and low fees, Avalanche pursues customizable subnets. Meanwhile, BNB Chain, utilizing exchange-linked liquidity, data shows that Ethereum remains a core part of the digital asset ecosystem. Researchers at RedStone have even pointed to Ethereum as the “institutional standard” due to its security, liquidity, and infrastructure. Meanwhile, the network continues to anchor the stablecoin market, with more than half of the $307 billion in supply. The network rolled out two major upgrades this year, which likely helped boost transactions and reduce fees. In May, the Pectra upgrade brought improvements to validators, enhanced staking options, and prepared Ethereum for future scalability features. On the other hand, Fusaka expanded the gas limit to 60 million and focused on enhancing network efficiency, scalability, and data handling. Over 50% of validators had signaled support in February to increase Ethereum’s block gas limit, boosting transaction capacity per block.
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