Ethereum Vs. Solana: Arthur Hayes Picks His Winner

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Ethereum Vs. Solana: Arthur Hayes Picks His Winner | Crypto News


Arthur Hayes has a clear reply to the market’s favourite bar battle. In an August 21 interview with Ran Neuner, the BitMEX co-founder said both Ethereum and Solana will rally laborious, but he’s explicitly tilted toward ETH for the rest of the cycle. “Do I believe Solana is going to go up? Absolutely it’s going to go up. Do I believe it’s going to go up more than ETH? I don’t know. Probably not,” Hayes said. When pressed on portfolio construction, he didn’t hedge: “In terms of a position… you’d be more overweight ETH? Correct. Yes.”

Ethereum Vs. Solana: Who Wins This Cycle?

Neuner framed the context that has flipped the dialog from “Solana-only” to an Ethereum-led commerce, citing a sequence of catalysts—from stablecoins to marquee advocates—that has turned ETH into “the darling asset of Wall Street.” Hayes didn’t contest the premise. Instead, he described the competition between the 2 chains as a “race” more and more outlined by the dimensions of capital now zeroing in on Ethereum: “ETH is a bigger asset to move, but there’s a lot of money chasing it. So it’s going to be [an] interesting race.” In other phrases, measurement is just not a bug if flows are thick enough; it’s the function that channels the biggest bid.

That flows-first view also explains why Hayes sees ETH’s upside accelerating once resistance is convincingly cleared. Responding to Neuner’s remark that Bitcoin sits nicely above its prior all-time high while ETH had been “struggling to break,” Hayes raised his sights past catch-up toward open-ended momentum: “I think ETH goes to $10,000 [or] 20,000 before the end of the cycle… once it’s broken through, then… it’s a gap of air to the upside.” He added that on shorter time frames, “the chart says it’s going higher now,” noting he had “bought back some of the ETH” he beforehand bought.

None of this means Hayes is bearish on Solana. He disclosed he advises Upexi, a Nasdaq-listed company with a Solana-focused treasury, and reiterated his expectation that SOL will benefit from the same risk-on currents: “They’re both going to go up. The question is which one goes up more.” But even with that proximity to the Solana ecosystem, he returned to the relative case: “Do I believe [Solana]’s going to go up more than ETH?… Probably not.”

Neuner summarized the narrative shift bluntly—ETH “caught this massive Wall Street narrative,” with stablecoins, tokenized property and high-profile champions such as Joseph Lubin and Tom Lee placing a megaphone behind Ethereum, after a period when “it’s a SOL cycle” dominated discourse.

Hayes’ reply was not to relitigate the tech stack—Neuner even joked about Solana as the “fast monolithic chain”—but to anchor the ETH-over-SOL call in the mechanics of capital formation and passive demand now assembling around Ethereum’s market construction. In his telling, as institutional autos and public ETH treasury firms marshal recent inflows, the “bigger asset to move” turns into the natural sink for the thickest flows.

Hayes’ comparative view therefore rests on three on-record pillars. First, positioning: he’s overweight ETH versus SOL on a proportion foundation. Second, flows: he expects more money to chase ETH in this part of the cycle, despite (and because of) its bigger base. Third, trajectory: once ETH sustains a breakout, he sees “the sky’s the limit” dynamics taking over, with a cycle goal of $10,000–$20,000 for ETH. The respect for Solana’s upside stays, but the winner—on Hayes’ numbers and his own guide—is Ethereum.

At press time, ETH traded at $4,285.

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