The Market Might Be Getting Ethereum All Wrong
Ethereum (ETH) slipped nearly 5% on Friday, but if blockchain analyst William Mougayar is right, the market is making a fundamental category error when it prices the network. His research, recently highlighted by longtime pseudonymous Ethereum investor DeFi Dad, challenges the entire way investors think about Ethereum's value.
Here's the core issue: markets are pricing Ethereum like a revenue-generating technology company, obsessing over transaction fees, token issuance, and quarterly cash flows. But Mougayar argues Ethereum should be valued as public infrastructure—something closer to the base layers of the Internet like TCP/IP, where the real economic value shows up everywhere except the infrastructure itself.
Three Layers Of Value That Traditional Metrics Miss
The research breaks Ethereum's value into three distinct layers that standard financial analysis tends to overlook.
First is captured value—the stuff everyone already tracks. This includes transaction fees, miner-extractable value, ETH burn mechanisms, and staking economics directly tied to network activity.
Second is flow value, which measures the total economic activity settled on Ethereum. Think stablecoins, DeFi collateral, tokenized assets, and payment flows. This is value moving through Ethereum rather than captured by it.
Third is trust surplus—the premium that comes from Ethereum functioning as a neutral, global settlement layer. Institutions pay for the assurance of decentralized infrastructure without centralized control points.
When you aggregate these three layers, Mougayar places Ethereum's current intrinsic value somewhere between $2 trillion and $6 trillion, with a conservative present-day estimate closer to $1 trillion. That's substantially higher than where markets currently price the network.
The $10-20 Trillion Vision For 2035
The long-term projection gets more ambitious. The report extends its framework into a scenario where Ethereum evolves into what Mougayar calls a "Global Trust Underlayer" for finance. Under that assumption, the network's valuation could expand toward $10 trillion to $20 trillion by around 2035.
The comparison here is to the Internet itself—whose economic impact compounded over decades, far exceeding early valuations of the underlying protocol layers. Supporters of this thesis point to Ethereum's recent underperformance relative to Bitcoin (BTC) and competing Layer-1 networks as evidence of market impatience rather than fundamental weakness.
Meanwhile, The Charts Look Rough
While the trillion-dollar thesis makes its rounds, Ethereum's near-term technical picture remains under pressure. ETH got rejected yet again at a falling downtrend line that's capped price action since October. Every rally into that zone has met heavy selling.
The token now hovers near the 0.236 Fibonacci level around $3,006, which has served as critical support during previous pullbacks. A sustained hold above $3,000 keeps the November lows intact and maintains some hope for bulls. But a breakdown below that level opens downside risk toward $2,620, which would invalidate much of the recent consolidation pattern.
So you've got a long-term valuation case in the trillions and a short-term chart testing make-or-break support. It's the classic tension between fundamental vision and price action reality—and it'll be interesting to see which one market participants decide to believe.




