As Wall Street focuses on liquidation risk and downside momentum, Tom Lee is taking the opposite side of the trade.
Appearing on Closing Bell, the founder of Fundstrat Global Advisors argued that Ethereum’s recent 40% drawdown is not a breakdown, but a familiar setup that has historically preceded rapid recoveries.
Rather than framing the move as structural damage, Lee described the sell-off as a “springboard” phase, where excess leverage is cleared and sentiment resets before price rebounds.
Lee’s thesis is grounded in Ethereum’s historical behavior, not short-term price action. He pointed out that since 2018, ETH has experienced seven drawdowns of 60% or more. In every case, the recovery followed a V-shaped pattern, where the time spent reclaiming prior highs roughly matched the duration of the decline.
From his perspective, the current move fits that template closely. The speed and depth of the recent sell-off suggest capitulation rather than a slow structural unwind, particularly after a cascade of forced liquidations over the past ten days.
Lee also emphasized sentiment. He described current positioning as “rock bottom,” arguing that extreme pessimism has historically coincided with points where downside momentum begins to exhaust itself.
Unlike earlier cycles, Lee believes Ethereum now has fundamental supports that strengthen the recovery case. As chairman of Bitmine, he highlighted the growing role of institutional-grade mining infrastructure and the network’s evolution beyond pure speculation.
He also referenced the upcoming “Glamsterdam” upgrade, expected later in 2026, as a structural improvement that adds a longer-term floor to ETH’s valuation. In his view, these changes reduce the likelihood that the current drawdown evolves into a prolonged stagnation phase similar to earlier bear markets.
Lee’s V-shaped recovery thesis faces its first real test during the week of February 9–13, when several macro and crypto-specific events converge.
The Consensus Hong Kong conference could act as a catalyst if it brings renewed institutional interest from Asia. Meanwhile, U.S. CPI and Nonfarm Payrolls data on February 11 will shape risk appetite across equities and crypto alike. A cooler inflation print would support the macro tailwinds Lee expects.
From a price-structure perspective, Lee suggested that a strong weekly close, particularly one that reclaims key mid-range levels, would be consistent with the early stages of a V-shaped recovery.
Lee’s outlook stands in sharp contrast to more cautious voices across Wall Street. Firms warning about CTA-driven selling pressure and unresolved downtrends in major assets continue to argue that the market has not fully absorbed risk.
In Lee’s framework, however, those same risks are what create opportunity. He views the recent ETH collapse not as evidence of failure, but as the kind of violent reset that has historically preceded strong recoveries.
For now, Ethereum remains volatile and technically fragile. But if history rhymes the way Lee expects, the market may already be closer to the end of the sell-off than most investors are willing to admit.
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