Bankless co-founder David Hoffman said he sold his ETH after concluding that the “ETH is money” thesis has largely played out, marking a notable shift from one of Ethereum’s most visible public advocates. Hoffman said he remains “massively bullish” on Ethereum as a network, but no longer sees a clear path for ETH, the asset, to receive a structural rerating from here.
Hoffman Says Ethereum’s Monetary Window Is ClosingHoffman described Ethereum as a vast coordination game, where the “ETH is money” thesis required multiple layers of the ecosystem to align at once. Ethereum needed decentralized leadership, responsive governance, fast technical execution, coherent L2 incentives, and enough market dominance to make ETH the natural monetary Schelling point of the ecosystem.
That, he argued, was always a narrow path. “Money is a coordination game, and coordination is hard,” Hoffman wrote. “The Ethereum project itself is a stacked set of coordination challenges across multiple layers, and the ‘ETH is money’ thesis required all of them to succeed, and succeed with confidence.”
In Hoffman’s view, Ethereum made the harder architectural choice compared with Bitcoin. Bitcoin stripped its base layer down to elevate BTC’s monetary role. Ethereum added programmability and sought to maximize blockspace utility. That approach created enormous surface area for adoption, but also made ETH’s monetary status dependent on Ethereum winning across technology, culture, governance and market structure at the same time.
Hoffman said Ethereum achieved “some of the way there,” but not the maximal version of the thesis many ETH bulls once expected.
Fees, L2s And The Asset-Capture ProblemEthereum, by contrast, has deliberately moved toward a structure where value leaks outward. Rollups scale execution, applications capture more of the user-facing margin, and Ethereum provides secure settlement at low cost. Hoffman described this as a feature of Ethereum’s ideology and architecture, but a challenge for ETH as an asset.
“At its heart, Ethereum is a giver, not a taker,” he wrote. “It supplies L2s with the world’s most secure blockspace, at cost. It tokenizes the assets of the entire world, at cost.”
That framing sits at the core of his decision. Ethereum may be “noble,” “good,” and “the world’s most successful non-profit,” Hoffman argued, but that does not automatically make ETH a better investment from this point forward. He said the rollup-centric roadmap means L2s can take “97% margins,” while the fat-app thesis leaves more economics with applications rather than the base asset.
Stablecoins And The ‘Strong Crypto’ ProblemHoffman also argued that Ethereum’s utility may increasingly strengthen other forms of money. He noted that Ethereum hosted $3 billion in stablecoins in 2020 and $163 billion today, a 54x increase. The network’s success as settlement infrastructure, in that sense, has helped expand tokenized dollars, not necessarily ETH’s role as money.
He also questioned whether the “strong version” of crypto (DeFi, NFTs, DAOs and an alternative financial system built for its own sake) ever became a stable enough cultural or economic equilibrium. The moment when ETH functioned most convincingly as internet money, he argued, coincided with the COVID-era surge in online activity, risk appetite and public fascination with crypto.
“ETH excelled as internet money at the exact moment everyone was forced onto the internet,” Hoffman wrote. “The world discovered cryptocurrency for the first time, and for that brief window, it was cool.”
The implication is that ETH’s monetary premium may have depended on a broader crypto-native boom that did not hold. Ethereum kept building, but the public narrative around crypto shifted back toward scams, grifts and speculation, weakening the social foundation needed for ETH to become a dominant store-of-value asset.
Hoffman closed by stressing that he is not bearish on Ethereum itself. His decision, he said, reflects a capital allocation call after the “ETH is money” thesis reached a mature outcome.
At press time, ETH traded at $2,080.




















