- Ethereum Merge has begun, leaving proof-of-work behind for a new proof-of-stake consensus mechanism.
- Developers in the DeFi ecosystem believe Ethereum’s Merge will not lower gas fees or improve scalability, transaction costs could remain high.
- Demand for Ethereum derivatives skyrocketed with the launch of CME group’s ETH options.
Ethereum Merge will have a massive impact on the crypto ecosystem. Despite its short history, crypto has several key updates lined up, the Merge and the ETHW hard fork. The successful completion of the Merge could alter the future of the DeFi ecosystem and several dApps that rely on the Ethereum blockchain for conducting business.
Also read: Ethereum v. Bitcoin: ETH is winning despite BTC price rally to $22,000
What is the Ethereum Merge and why it matters
The Merge is Ethereum’s multi-year planned transition for the altcoin’s blockchain. Ethereum’s objective is to move from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake and reduce the blockchain’s carbon imprint by 99.95%. The launch of the Beacon chain in 2020 was the first step towards this transition and the completion of the last shadow fork was the pre-final one.
Ethereum Merge upgrade path
Miners and proof-of-work supporters have announced a hard fork to keep the blockchain alive for those unwilling to move to the proof-of-stake chain. Therefore, with the launch of the proof-of-stake chain, a proof-of-work chain is likely to exist in parallel and continue functioning.
The Merge represents an end of an era for Ethereum and all efforts of developers and the team are focused on scalability and lowering transaction costs post the migration. The main Ethereum blockchain, resources, key partners and institutions are likely to embrace the proof-of-stake version, driving ETH adoption higher.
Ethereum’s transitional journey begins with the Merge. The transition to proof-of-stake marks a half-way point in Ethereum’s journey, a 55% completion as developers eye the next major goal, sharding. Sharding aims to improve scalability via segmenting the Ethereum blockchain into parallel portions.
Roadmap to Ethereum 2.0, PoS and Sharding
Ethereum Merge: Risks and challenges
Industry experts, crypto proponents and influencers have evaluated the potential risks and challenges associated with Ethereum Merge. Find the list below:
- Merge could trigger negative funding: There is rising concern among investors about negative funding. Traders with a strategy to buy Ethereum in spot markets and sell or stock and hedge in the future will receive ETHPoW tokens. These tokens will be airdropped for no additional cost and sold in open markets. Excess short positions in perpetual and futures contracts as a result of these trading strategies could result in negative funding. Negative funding implies traders are bearish, therefore it has emerged as a cause of concern. Based on data from Coinalyze, the average Ether funding rate across major exchanges- Binance, FTX, Bybit, OKEx and Deribit has dropped to its most negative ever. Holding Ethereum short positions is more expensive than it has ever been in history.
Ether funding rate across major cryptocurrency exchanges
- Minor glitches could pop up along the way: With the current difficulty, hash rate and the pressure on the successful completion of the Merge, there is a likelihood of certain minor glitches that might show up and be adjusted along the way. Proof-of-stake validators will shoulder the responsibility that miners took on, since Ethereum’s launch, therefore glitches are likely to show up.
Differences between proof-of-work and proof-of-stake
Trading strategies for Ethereum post-Merge play
The successful completion of Ethereum’s Merge could act as a catalyst, fueling bullish sentiment among holders. Traders holding “spot” Ethereum could benefit from the hike in Ethereum’s price.
Traders hedging their bag of Ethereum could consider moving a small portion of their portfolio to a short position using futures contracts. “Timing the market” is key to this move, any short-term losses experienced could be adjusted against the small percentage of holdings from the portfolio. If Ethereum price climbs post Merge, you could lose your holdings. However, hiccups during the Merge could fuel a dump and investors could shed their holdings, therefore, your position turns into a profitable one.
Bybit’s recommended trading strategies for Ethereum Merge play
$22 billion bet on ETH2, good or bad?
Ethereum’s Merge will decide if the $22 billion worth of Ethereum deposited to the staking contract was a good bet or a bad one. In the days leading up to the Merge, there was a massive spike in Ethereum deposited to the ETH2 contract. This has fueled anticipation and excitement in ETH holders ahead of the Merge.
ETH2.0 total value staked
It is important to dispel the myth that staked Ethereum will be unlocked post the Merge, increasing the pressure on ETH. Staked Ethereum withdrawals will be enabled through another key upgrade nearly six months post the Merge. A validator would have to exit and there is a limit on the number of validators that can exit per epoch.
CME group launched Ether options in response to Merge
CME Group, a leading derivatives marketplace, announced the launch of Ether options in response to the skyrocketing demand for Ethereum derivatives ahead of the Merge. Tim McCourt, global head of equity and FX products at CME Group told CoinDesk,
In 2022, Bitcoin and Ethereum are trading nearly the same. We look at the totality of our products, options as well as futures products and they are doing similar volume. There is a distinct enthusiasm surrounding Ethereum products. Ether has its own distinct community. Institutions…are gravitating towards the Ethereum network.
Where is Ethereum price headed post Merge?
Alex Krüger, crypto trader and analyst revealed his short-term bullish outlook on Ethereum ahead of the Merge. The analyst tweeted:
This is strictly a short-term post. I have my short term hat on at the moment. I'm very bullish on $ETH mid to long term.https://t.co/urFfYNeCZb
— Alex Krüger (@krugermacro) September 15, 2022