Ethereum closed September with its most robust quarterly performance in over four years, echoing the
Ethereum closed September with its most robust quarterly performance in over four years, echoing the explosive gains last seen when its price first breached the $4,000 threshold in early 2021.
According to CoinGlass data, ETH rallied 48.7% in July and 18.8% in August, before losing ground in September with a modest 5% pullback.
Even with that dip, the token ended the quarter up 66.6%, hitting an all-time high of $4,953.73 in August on the back of steady accumulation by corporate treasuries and renewed retail activity.
That momentum has spilled into October. CryptoSlate data shows Ethereum climbed another 4% this week to touch $4,300, a multi-week peak, supported by a broader rally that lifted Bitcoin and XRP.
What drove Ethereums price rally in Q3?
The most significant driver of Ethereums rally during the reporting period was the throng of institutional investors in the digital asset.
This is evidenced by the strong inflows into the nine US-based spot ETH ETF products between July and August, when they attracted fresh capital of around $10 billion. During this period, BlackRocks ETHA vehicle crossed the $10 billion assets-under-management threshold, making it the third-ever ETF to hit the milestone in one year.
At the same time, corporate treasuries have sharply expanded their ETH exposure. During the quarter, corporate ETH holdings climbed from around $2 billion to over $23 billion, making the digital asset the fastest-growing treasury crypto in the industry.
Considering these aggressive purchases from these institutional investors, Bitwises Matt Hougan had predicted in July that:
“ETPs and ETH treasury companies [could buy] $20 billion of ETH in the next year, or 5.33 million ETH at todays prices.”
Meanwhile, institutional flows were not the only driver of ETHs strong performance in the quarter.
In the third quarter, Ethereums on-chain activity surged, reflecting its central role in the DeFi sector.
CryptoQuant analyst Darkfrost noted that transaction counts, which hovered between 900,000 and 1.2 million daily over the past four years, have now broken out to record highs of 1.6–1.7 million.
That growth tracks closely with ETHs price action, reinforcing the view that network activity directly supports valuation.
Token Terminal data paints a similar picture by pointing out that applications built on Ethereum, such as stablecoins, DEXs, and real-world assets, currently hold about $355 billion in user assets. At the same time, ETH trades at roughly 1.44 times the ecosystems total value locked (TVL).
According to the firm, the market capitalization of tokenized assets on Ethereum has consistently set a floor for ETHs valuation.
So, as more assets, from stablecoins to tokenized treasuries, enter the chain, ETH‘s market cap rises in tandem. This relationship suggests that Ethereum’s growth is not just speculative but grounded in expanding on-chain utility.
At the time of press 4:46 pm UTC on Oct. 1, 2025, Ethereum is ranked #2 by market cap and the price is up 5.51%over the past 24 hours. Ethereum has a market capitalization of $523.78 billionwith a 24-hour trading volume of $45.69 billion. Learn more about Ethereum ›
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