Fundstrat's Tom Lee sees Ethereum's network value reaching $5 trillion, a 24x increase from current levels, as tokenization and on-chain migration of real-world assets accelerate.
Fundstrat's Tom Lee sees Ethereum's network value reaching $5 trillion, a 24x increase from current levels, as tokenization and on-chain migration of real-world assets accelerate.

Ethereum traded at $1,740 as of July 10, giving it a market capitalization of roughly $210 billion, according to CoinGecko. Fundstrat co-founder Tom Lee said the network could be worth $5 trillion — implying a token price near $41,300 based on the current circulating supply of about 121 million coins — as real-world assets migrate on-chain.
"Ethereum is money narrative likely gains traction," Lee wrote on X, sharing a BitMine post that cited expanding stablecoin adoption, continued tokenization and new Ethereum-based corporate spin-offs as structural tailwinds for the ETH/BTC ratio in the second half of 2026.
Lee's valuation framework compares Ethereum's current $210 billion market cap against gold at roughly $22 trillion, global equities above $100 trillion and real estate near $300 trillion, according to comments on the New Era Finance podcast. Even a small fraction of those assets moving on-chain would represent a multiple of Ethereum's current value, he argued.
The thesis depends on tokenization of real-world assets and Ethereum's role as the primary settlement layer for that migration. BitMine, a Bitcoin mining firm that has been accumulating Ethereum for its treasury, has echoed the call, pointing to the CLARITY Act and the GENIUS Act as regulatory catalysts that could accelerate institutional participation.
Lee has maintained his bullish stance through a prolonged period of underperformance. Ethereum has declined largely because of macroeconomic factors rather than deteriorating fundamentals, he said in May, attributing the weakness to rising oil prices. WTI crude has since dropped 26% to around $70 a barrel, a move Lee said supports his disinflation thesis and could lift risk assets including crypto.
"Rage quitting people selling here as if something is wrong," Lee said in a CNBC interview. "If someone asked me, is the thesis for Bitcoin or Ethereum broken, it's absolutely not."
Near-term, Ethereum faces a technical test at the $1,750 to $1,770 resistance zone, according to market data. A break above that level could open a path toward $1,845 to $1,865, with the $1,975 to $2,000 range representing the next major hurdle. On the downside, support sits at $1,725, with a close below that exposing $1,620 and potentially $1,530.
The $41,000-plus target implied by Lee's $5 trillion valuation remains a long-term thesis rather than a near-term trading call. For that scenario to materialize, tokenized real-world assets would need to drive sustained demand across Ethereum's network — a process that depends on regulatory clarity, institutional infrastructure and macroeconomic conditions aligning over multiple years.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.