According to Cointelegraph, major Ethereum holders have been actively acquiring Ether (ETH) over the past month, while retail investors have been selling off their holdings. Ethereum wallets containing between 1,000 and 100,000 ETH, often referred to as whales and sharks, have collectively added a net total of 1.49 million ETH, valued at approximately $3.79 billion, over the last 30 days. This increase represents a 3.72% rise in their collective holdings. As of June 12, these key wallets now hold 41.61 million ETH, accounting for nearly 27% of the current Ether supply.

The surge in whale activity is not limited to simple accumulation. Ethereum's decentralized finance (DeFi) space has also seen significant interest from these large holders. The Ethereum Name Service experienced the most substantial increase in whale transaction activity during the second week of July, with a rise of 313.5%. Following closely was an Ethereum lending protocol, which saw a 203.8% increase in whale transactions. Additionally, the Ethereum layer 2 Base-powered Virtual Protocol and USDC transfers on Ethereum layer 2 solutions, Arbitrum and Optimism, also experienced triple-digit growth in activity.

Despite the increased whale buying and adoption, Ether's price has only seen modest gains, rising 1.8% and 3.8% over the last 14 and 30 days, respectively, according to CoinGecko data. Currently, Ether is trading at $2,575, which is nearly 48% below its all-time high. In the spot ETF market, there has been a notable increase in institutional confidence in ETH. U.S.-based Ether products experienced a 19-day inflow streak before it ended on Friday, with net outflows of $2.1 million recorded on that day. This streak marked the longest period of inflows since the products were launched in July 2024, with a total of $1.37 billion flowing into spot Ether ETFs, primarily into the BlackRock-issued iShares Ethereum Trust ETF.

In related news, shares in sports betting platform SharpLink Gaming dropped by 73% in after-hours trading last Thursday. This decline followed the company's filing to register a large volume of shares for potential resale, a move that did not sit well with investors who had invested in the firm's Ether treasury plan. Joseph Lubin, chairman of SharpLink Gaming and CEO of blockchain software firm Consensys, stated that market observers had misinterpreted the filing. SharpLink had announced plans to sell up to $1 billion in common shares on May 30, with the majority of the proceeds intended for purchasing ETH.