Ethereum’s MVRV ratio has dropped to 0.9, meaning the average ETH holder is currently underwater on their position. The data confirms ETH is cheap relative to its historical cost basis. It also confirms that cheap can become cheaper.
MVRV, or Market Value to Realized Value, measures the ratio between Ethereum’s current market price and the average price at which all ETH last moved on-chain. A reading above 1.0 means the average holder is in profit. A reading below 1.0 means the average holder is at a loss.
At 0.9, the average ETH investor is sitting on approximately a 10% unrealised loss. That condition has historically been associated with accumulation zones rather than cycle peaks.
The MVRV chart from CryptoQuant covers July 2020 through early 2026, plotting the ratio in blue against ETH price in green on a logarithmic scale.
The chart shows two prior instances where MVRV dropped below 1.0 in a sustained way. The first was the 2022 bear market, when the ratio fell from above 3.0 at the peak to below 0.5 at the cycle low around $880. The second was a brief dip in mid-2023 before recovery. Both prior sub-1.0 episodes resolved higher eventually. Both also pushed significantly below 0.9 before finding their floor. The 2022 low reached approximately 0.5 on the MVRV scale, a level that would imply roughly 44% additional downside from current prices.
The second chart plots Ethereum’s Realized Price Bands from 2016 through early 2026. Four lines run across the chart: ETH price in black, the ETH Realized Price in blue, the Realized Price Upper Band in red, and the Realized Price Lower Band in green.
The upper band in red has consistently marked cycle peaks. ETH price touching or exceeding the upper band coincided with the 2018 top, the 2021 top, and the 2025 top. The lower band in green has consistently marked cycle bottoms. During the 2018 to 2019 bear market, price gravitated toward and briefly touched the lower green band before recovering. During the 2022 bear market, price again moved toward the lower band before the cycle bottomed.
The lower band currently sits at approximately $1,152. Current ETH price near $1,982 sits above that level by roughly 72%. A move to the lower band from current prices would represent a drawdown of approximately 42%.
That number is not a prediction. It is a structural observation about where prior bear cycles have found their floor relative to the realized price framework. The framework has been consistent across three complete cycles.
The MVRV at 0.9 supports a constructive argument. The average holder is already underwater, which historically reduces the incentive to sell and increases the incentive to accumulate. The whale accumulation data covered earlier this week showed ETH accumulation address balances going parabolic. The Ethereum Foundation has committed to staking 70,000 ETH rather than selling. BlackRock launched its staked ETH ETF. Institutional demand for ETH exposure is building.
The Realized Price Bands support a more cautious argument. In every prior full bear cycle, ETH price has gravitated toward the lower band before recovering. The lower band at $1,152 has not been tested in the current cycle. Prior cycles suggest it eventually gets tested.
Both readings are consistent with the data. The honest answer is that ETH at 0.9 MVRV is cheap on a cost basis comparison, and that prior cycles have found ways to get cheaper before reversing. The accumulation happening at current prices either represents smart money positioning ahead of the recovery or early buying that gets a better entry point later.
The chart does not resolve which outcome is more likely. What it does is establish the levels that matter. $1,982 is where ETH trades now. $1,152 is where the lower band sits. The distance between them is the open question.
The post Ethereum’s MVRV Has Dropped Below 1: What That Means and How Much Lower It Could Go appeared first on ETHNews.


