Let me tell you about a warning that slipped under the radar this week, because while everyone was staring at Ethereum’s price, someone on the inside was quietly raising a flag about something more important.
But first, the price, since I know that is why you are here. ETH is sitting at $1,581, basically flat on the day but down a painful 8.4% on the week, the weakest of the major coins over the past seven days ( live ETH price on CoinGecko ). It is hovering near a support zone it has tested too many times for comfort. That is the surface story. Here is the one underneath.
The insider warning
This week, a former member of the Ethereum Foundation, the nonprofit that has steered Ethereum’s development for years, went public with a concern. As the Foundation steps back from its traditional role and governance shifts to new structures, he warned that Ethereum needs to quickly build new funding institutions to fill the gap, or risk a shortfall in how core development gets paid for.
Think about what that means for a second. Ethereum is not run by a company. There is no CEO writing checks to developers. For years, the Foundation has been the entity making sure the people who build and maintain Ethereum get funded. Now that the Foundation is deliberately pulling back, the question becomes: who pays for the work? If new funding institutions do not stand up fast enough, you could get a gap, a period where critical development is underfunded right as Ethereum is trying to scale.
That is the warning. And it matters because it is structural, not about this week’s candle. It is about who keeps the lights on for the next few years.
Why I am not panicking about it
Here is the balance, though, because I do not want to leave you with just the scary part. A funding gap warning is a call to action, not a death sentence, and Ethereum has navigated transitions before.
The on-chain reality is actually encouraging. Ethereum’s active addresses have hit cycle highs, meaning more people are using the network than at almost any point this cycle, even with the ugly price. Treasury companies are still buying ETH by the millions despite sitting on losses, betting on Ethereum as long-term infrastructure. And the Glamsterdam upgrade keeps hitting real performance milestones on its test networks. The technology and the usage are moving forward. The warning is about making sure the funding structure keeps pace, and now that it is out in the open, the community can actually address it.
So I read this less as “Ethereum is in trouble” and more as “an insider just told everyone what to fix.” That is healthy, even if it is uncomfortable.
The supply story is still quietly building
One more thing worth your attention, because it keeps not getting priced in. The amount of ETH sitting on exchanges remains near record lows, and the share locked in staking is near record highs. Less ETH available to sell, more of it locked away. That is a supply squeeze building in the background while the price does the opposite.
In a calm market, that tightening would matter. Right now, fear from Bitcoin’s slide to a 20-month low is drowning it out, and ETH, which always moves harder than Bitcoin, is getting hit extra hard. But supply squeezes are patient. They wait. And when sentiment finally turns, a market this tightly wound can move fast.
The levels I am watching
Below, the zone around $1,500 is the line. It has held repeatedly, but every test wears it down, so I would not treat it as bulletproof. If it goes, lower levels open up. Above, ETH needs to climb back over $1,700, then $1,800, and the real milestone is reclaiming $2,000, the level it lost on the way down. Get back above $2,000 and you can argue the supply squeeze is finally showing up where it counts.
Where this leaves us
Ethereum at $1,581 looks weak, and the near-term trend genuinely is, dragged down by a fearful market and ETH’s habit of falling harder than the rest. I will not pretend otherwise.
But keep your ear to the ground. An insider just flagged a funding gap the community needs to solve, usage is at cycle highs, and a supply squeeze is quietly building that almost nobody is pricing in. Watch $1,500 below and $2,000 above. The price is loud and ugly right now, but the more interesting Ethereum story is the quiet one playing out underneath it.
FAQ
What is the Ethereum price today?
Ethereum is trading around $1,581 on June 28, 2026, roughly flat on the day but down 8.4% on the week, the weakest major coin over the past seven days, hovering near the $1,500 support zone.
What is the Ethereum Foundation funding warning?
A former Ethereum Foundation member warned that as the Foundation steps back from its traditional role, Ethereum must quickly build new funding institutions to pay for core development, or risk a funding gap during the governance transition.
Why is Ethereum falling more than other coins?
Ethereum is a higher-beta asset that falls harder than Bitcoin in selloffs. With Bitcoin at a 20-month low and a fearful market, ETH took the worst weekly hit among majors, even as its on-chain usage hit cycle highs.
What are the key Ethereum levels to watch?
The key support is around $1,500, which has held repeatedly but weakens with each test. Above, ETH needs to reclaim $1,700, then $1,800, and the key $2,000 level it lost in the selloff.
Is Ethereum still a good long-term hold?
Ethereum’s usage is at cycle highs, treasury firms keep accumulating, and upgrades progress, but the funding-gap warning is a real structural question to watch. The supply squeeze is also building. This is not investment advice; assess your own risk tolerance.