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Arthur Hayes has a clear answer to the marketâs favorite bar fight. In an August 21 interview with Ran Neuner, the BitMEX co-founder said both Ethereum and Solana will rally hard, but he is explicitly tilted toward ETH for the remainder of the cycle. âDo I believe Solana is going to go up? Absolutely itâs going to go up. Do I believe itâs going to go up more than ETH? I donât know. Probably not,â Hayes said. When pressed on portfolio construction, he didnât hedge: âIn terms of a position⊠youâd be more overweight ETH? Correct. Yes.â
Ethereum Vs. Solana: Who Wins This Cycle?
Neuner framed the context that has flipped the conversation from âSolana-onlyâ to an Ethereum-led trade, citing a sequence of catalystsâfrom stablecoins to marquee advocatesâthat has turned ETH into âthe darling asset of Wall Street.â Hayes didnât contest the premise. Instead, he described the contest between the two chains as a âraceâ increasingly defined by the scale of capital now zeroing in on Ethereum: âETH is a bigger asset to move, but thereâs a lot of money chasing it. So itâs going to be [an] interesting race.â In other words, size is not a bug if flows are thick enough; itâs the feature that channels the largest bid.
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That flows-first view also explains why Hayes sees ETHâs upside accelerating once resistance is convincingly cleared. Responding to Neunerâs observation that Bitcoin sits well above its prior all-time high while ETH had been âstruggling to break,â Hayes raised his sights beyond catch-up toward open-ended momentum: âI think ETH goes to $10,000 [or] 20,000 before the end of the cycle⊠once itâs broken through, then⊠itâs a gap of air to the upside.â He added that on shorter time frames, âthe chart says itâs going higher now,â noting he had âbought back some of the ETHâ he previously sold.
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: âTheyâre both going to go up. The question is which one goes up more.â But even with that proximity to the Solana ecosystem, he returned to the relative case: âDo I believe [Solana]âs going to go up more than ETH?⊠Probably not.â
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Neuner summarized the narrative shift bluntlyâETH âcaught this massive Wall Street narrative,â with stablecoins, tokenized assets and high-profile champions such as Joseph Lubin and Tom Lee putting a megaphone behind Ethereum, after a period when âitâs a SOL cycleâ dominated discourse.
Hayesâ answer was not to relitigate the tech stackâNeuner even joked about Solana as the âfast monolithic chainââbut to anchor the ETH-over-SOL call in the mechanics of capital formation and passive demand now assembling around Ethereumâs market structure. In his telling, as institutional vehicles and public ETH treasury companies marshal fresh inflows, the âbigger asset to moveâ becomes the natural sink for the thickest flows.
Hayesâ comparative view therefore rests on three on-record pillars. First, positioning: he is overweight ETH versus SOL on a percentage basis. Second, flows: he expects more money to chase ETH in this phase of the cycle, despite (and because of) its larger base. Third, trajectory: once ETH sustains a breakout, he sees âthe skyâs the limitâ dynamics taking over, with a cycle target of $10,000â$20,000 for ETH. The respect for Solanaâs upside remains, but the winnerâon Hayesâ numbers and his own bookâis Ethereum.
At press time, ETH traded at $4,285.

Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com





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