For years, the investment thesis for Ethereum was abstract: a “world computer,” a decentralized settlement layer for the future of finance. While philosophically compelling, it often failed to concretely explain short-term price movements. Then came the explosions of DeFi and NFTs. Suddenly, Ethereum wasn’t just a platform with potential; it was a bustling digital economy with real, measurable activity. These two sectors didn’t just exist on Ethereum—they became primary drivers of its economic engine, fundamentally intertwining their cycles with the price of ETH itself. But how exactly does the trading of a digital artwork or the providing of liquidity in a digital pool translate into upward pressure on a cryptocurrency? The answer lies in a powerful feedback loop of usage, fee burning, and locked value that turns abstract utility into tangible demand.
The JPEG Engine: How NFT Mania Fuels ETH Demand
The Non-Fungible Token (NFT) boom, particularly the frenzy of 2021, provided a crystal-clear mechanism for Ethereum price appreciation. It did so by transforming ETH from a mere investment asset into the primary medium of exchange for a multi-billion dollar digital goods market.
The Minting Frenzy and the Gas Fee Firestorm:
Every action on the Ethereum network—every mint, trade, and transfer of an NFT—requires paying a transaction fee, known as “gas,” in ETH. During peak NFT mania, such as the launch of a highly anticipated project like Bored Ape Yacht Club or Otherdeeds, hundreds of thousands of users would compete to get their transactions included in the next block.
This created a massive, auction-style demand for block space. Gas prices would skyrocket to astronomical levels, sometimes exceeding $500 per transaction. This had two direct effects on ETH:
- Immediate Selling Pressure (Offset): NFT creators and project treasuries would often immediately sell a portion of the ETH earned from minting to cover operational costs (fiat salaries, marketing) and to secure profits. This created selling pressure.
- The Burn Mechanism (The Game Changer): With the implementation of EIP-1559 in August 2021, a fundamental portion of every gas fee paid is burned—permanently removed from circulation. During periods of intense network congestion caused by NFT minting, the burn rate skyrocketed. At its peak, the network was burning over $10 million worth of ETH per day. This introduced a deflationary force that directly counteracted selling pressure and reduced the overall supply of ETH.
The net effect was a massive net reduction in ETH supply. The NFT boom demonstrated that high demand for Ethereum’s block space could literally make the cryptocurrency scarcer, creating a direct link between cultural hype and tokenomics.
The DeFi Pulse: Liquidity Cycles and the ETH Lockup
If NFTs drive demand through fees, Decentralized Finance (DeFi) drives it through capital lock-up and utility.
The Flywheel of Liquidity Mining:
The “DeFi Summer” of 2020 saw the rise of yield farming. Protocols like Compound, Aave, and Uniswap incentivized users to provide liquidity to their platforms by offering lucrative token rewards. To participate, users had to lock up their capital—often in the form of ETH or ETH-based pairs (like ETH-USDC).
This process of staking or locking ETH in smart contracts effectively took it out of circulating supply available for sale. The more attractive the yields, the more ETH was locked away, reducing sell-side liquidity and creating upward price pressure. As the price of ETH rose, the USD value of the locked collateral increased, making the ecosystem richer and more secure, which in turn attracted more capital—a powerful virtuous cycle.
ETH as Collateral: The Backbone of a New Financial System:
Ethereum’s most profound use case in DeFi is its role as the premier form of collateral. To borrow stablecoins or other assets, users must lock up ETH in protocols like MakerDAO or Aave at a collateralized ratio (e.g., 150%). This means for every $1,000 borrowed, at least $1,500 of ETH is locked away.
This creates an incredibly powerful demand sink. Even if the borrower is bearish on ETH in the short term, they are mechanically long—they must hold and lock their ETH to access the loan. This system tethers demand for loans and leverage to demand for ETH itself, institutionalizing its role as a foundational asset.

Future Growth: The Next Waves of ETH Demand
The past influences of NFTs and DeFi are now giving way to the next generation of demand drivers, each poised to consume vast amounts of block space and locked value.
1. Layer-2 Scaling and the Superchain Thesis:
Ethereum is no longer just a single chain; it’s becoming a hub of Layer-2 networks like Arbitrum, Optimism, Polygon, and Base. These L2s process transactions off-chain and post batches of data back to Ethereum Mainnet for final security. Crucially, they pay for this security in ETH.
- The More They Grow, The More ETH They Burn: As these L2s onboard millions of users and facilitate billions in transactions, the volume of data they need to post to Ethereum grows. This increased demand for Ethereum block space drives more gas fees, which in turn leads to more ETH being burned. The success of the Ethereum ecosystem directly fuels demand for its native asset.
2. Real-World Asset (RWA) Tokenization:
This is potentially the largest future driver of ETH demand. Imagine tokenizing trillions of dollars of real-world value—T-bills, real estate, corporate debt—on blockchain networks. Ethereum is the leading contender to host these assets due to its security and decentralization.
- Collateralizing the World: If a piece of real estate is tokenized on a chain secured by Ethereum, or if a fund holds tokenized T-bills on Ethereum, that asset will likely need to be over-collateralized or secured by… ETH. This would create an unprecedented demand for ETH as the trustless backbone for a new global financial system.
3. Account Abstraction and Mass Adoption:
Future upgrades aim to make Ethereum wallets as easy to use as web2 accounts. This “account abstraction” could onboard billions of users who never have to understand gas fees or seed phrases. While this might make transactions cheaper for users, the sheer volume of activity from mass adoption would create a constant, high baseline of gas fee demand, ensuring the ETH burn mechanism continues at a steady pace.
Conclusion: From Utility to Value Capture
The rise of NFTs and DeFi did more than just create digital art and yield farms; they provided the missing link in Ethereum’s value proposition: a clear mechanism for utility to translate into price appreciation.
They demonstrated that:
- Usage Demands ETH: To participate in the most exciting digital economies, you must use ETH, creating constant buy-side pressure.
- Usage Burns ETH: High network activity permanently destroys ETH, making it scarcer.
- Usage Locks ETH: To access financial services and earn yield, users willingly immobilize their ETH, reducing selling pressure.
Ethereum is no longer just a platform people speculate on; it is a economic nation-state whose currency (ETH) is required to pay for its services (block space) and participate in its economy (DeFi, NFTs). The future waves of L2 growth and RWA tokenization promise to scale this economic engine to a level that will make the booms of 2021 look like a mere testnet. The value of ETH, therefore, becomes a direct function of the scale and value of the economy it secures.