Ether’s weekend slide at the turn of February revived a familiar question: is the Ethereum network falling behind newer competitors or struggling to justify its valuation?
As ETH plunged by as much as 17% alongside most of crypto, skeptics wondered whether this was a warning sign that the protocol’s dominance may be eroding.
Yet inside Ethereum’s ecosystem, the sell-off has not been met with the same alarm. Developers and long-term players largely framed the move as a market-driven correction rather than a verdict on Ethereum’s health.
By several measures, network activity remains near peak levels. “Ethereum TVL is actually near all-time highs when denominated in ETH,” said Sam Ruskin, an analyst at Messari, suggesting capital has not meaningfully fled the ecosystem even as the token’s dollar price slipped.
(ETH TVL denominated in ETH/ DefiLlama)Other indicators point in the same direction. The entry queue for ETH staking — the wait validators face to help secure the network — has stretched to roughly 70 days, a signal that demand to commit capital to Ethereum, especially among large institutions, remains strong despite short-term volatility.
That resilience is also showing up across decentralized finance, where activity has held up even as prices have soured. Traders and users are still engaging with onchain applications in search of yield, a sign that usage has not evaporated alongside sentiment.
“We’re still growing and getting more users and revenue, but token price is lagging,” said Mike Silagadze, the CEO of ether.fi, one of the largest restaking networks, to CoinDesk over Telegram. “We’re just focusing on the long run.”
Some market observers argue that the price move itself is being overinterpreted. Marcin Kazmierczak, CEO of blockchain data firm RedStone, said ether’s decline looks more like market “noise” than a signal of weakening fundamentals, particularly as retail trading activity fades. What matters more, he said, is a level of institutional conviction around onchain finance that he hasn’t seen before.
“The absence of retail excitement is actually refreshing – the next cycle will be driven by real adoption, not memes, and it allows builders to focus on creating long-term value,” Kazmierczak added.
That disconnect between price action and progress on the ground is a familiar pattern in Ethereum’s history. Periods of market turbulence have often coincided with some of the network’s most consequential development milestones, as builders continue to ship regardless of short-term sentiment.
“As we have seen with the Merge, the market is pretty bad at pricing in the fundamental technical realities of chains,” said Marius Van Der Wijden, a core developer at the Ethereum Foundation, noting that major technical changes are often only fully reflected in prices well after they are completed.
For some analysts, the divergence between price and onchain data reflects broader market dynamics rather than Ethereum-specific weakness. Ruskin said the network “looks as healthy as it ever did,” arguing that ETH’s recent decline is more closely tied to bitcoin’s movements or wider market sentiment than to any deterioration in Ethereum’s fundamentals.
Read more: DeFi’s quiet strength: Value locked on platforms holds as market selloff tests traders
Source: https://www.coindesk.com/business/2026/02/03/ethereum-builders-shrug-off-eth-decline-as-network-activity-holds-steady



