Author: Sam Tabar
Compiled by: Jiahuan, ChainCatcher
I bought more ETH.
Not because of cycles, nor narratives. I examined the data, studied the asset, and concluded it was mispriced. When I see a mispricing, I act.
But this decision deserves more than a tweet. The questions it raises deserve honest exploration.
The "Money" Framework is a Mistake
The "ETH is money" argument is the grandest vision for Ethereum's future. I understand its appeal. Money is a coordination game, requiring an immense and enduring consensus of belief, so large it becomes self-fulfilling.
Bitcoin is playing that game, and to win, it has stripped away all other attributes.
Ethereum, by contrast, chose utility.
That choice means ETH cannot win the money coordination game like Bitcoin. But it also means Ethereum has built something Bitcoin never attempted: a programmable settlement layer that the entire world is now actively building upon.
This is a fundamentally different asset, with a different value proposition. Measuring it by the logic of money and calling it a failure is like grading a railroad on whether it would make good currency.
Value is Already Materializing
The most common criticism I hear is that the coordination challenges between the base layer, L2s, developers, and markets have fragmented the Ethereum ecosystem, causing ETH to miss its moment.
That holds some truth. However, institutional capital does not need Ethereum to win some narrative war. It needs a reliable, battle-tested, programmable settlement layer. Stablecoins are being issued on Ethereum. US Treasuries are being tokenized on Ethereum. AI agent transactions are beginning to settle on Ethereum.
None of this requires waiting for narrative consensus. It's already happening.
When I decided to build around Ethereum, my logic was straightforward: WhiteFiber provides us with the compute layer. ETH provides the settlement rails. Compute and settlement are the two core primitives needed for institutional finance to move on-chain.
Right now, Ethereum is the only place that has both, at scale.
The story may still be unfolding. But the rails are already in use.
The Bet Wasn't Wrong, The Timing Was
Many look at ETH's price over the past two years and declare the trade over. I think they're looking at the wrong catalyst.
Valuation re-ratings will never come from retail chasing narratives; that's always a fragile foundation for an asset with this much underlying infrastructure. The real catalyst is institutional demand, and institutional demand doesn't run on Crypto Twitter's timeline.
It only moves when compliance frameworks are ready, when custody rails exist, when the regulatory environment is stable enough for a CFO to sign off.
That moment is much closer than current prices reflect.
Why I Bought
I want to be very clear. I hold ETH because I have a fiduciary duty to make intelligent capital allocation decisions, and at the price I bought, ETH met that threshold.
Stripping away the narratives, this asset's essence is: it yields a return. Our staking business generated a 94.7% gross margin in Q1. This is a business, not just a vision.
It secures the world's dominant smart contract platform, which processed trillions of dollars in transactions last year and is adding institutional volume every quarter. And it trades, in my opinion, at a material discount to the value of the infrastructure it powers.
I do not need ETH to become the world's reserve currency to own it. I only need it to remain what it is, and keep doing what it's doing.
That alone is enough reason for me to buy. And it is also enough reason for me to continue to hold.








