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AI agency narratives clash with ETH reality: on-chain data and derivatives are all bearish
AI Hype Didn’t Boost ETH Strength
A tweet about ERC-8004 went viral, describing Ethereum as an AI agent trust and settlement layer, with 266,000 views and 15 major accounts retweeting. The narrative is compelling: Ethereum isn’t just a “DeFi relic,” but the infrastructure for the next-generation AI economy. Developers are also active—since March 1, there have been over 325 related discussions on Twitter, including Phala’s TEE guide and Polygon’s Agent CLI.
But the price isn’t responding. ETH dropped from $2,127 on March 6 to $1,939 on March 9, a 9% pullback. TVL remains around $295 billion, but daily active users fell from 789,000 to 621,000, a 21% decline. Retail investors are clearly pulling out, and the macro environment isn’t helping either.
Derivatives data confirms this. Open interest across the market is about $50 billion, funding rate at -0.88%, meaning short positions pay but still see queues; liquidations hit $63 million, with longs being wiped out at a 3:1 ratio. This isn’t building a position based on AI narratives but preparing for further declines.
Can the Standardization Debate Change the L1 Competition?
Discussions around ERC-8004 position Ethereum as an AI agent coordination and settlement layer, comparable to Solana’s Agent Registry and Polygon’s CLI approach. This narrative is attractive to capital: shifting from emotion/meme-driven chains to one emphasizing “usability and standardization.”
The problem is: no verifiable adoption data. Lacking concrete metrics, it risks repeating the burnout cycle of the previous DeFi hype. Meanwhile, Solana’s stablecoin market reached $650 billion in February, and tangible progress like FairScale’s reputation modules are putting pressure on Ethereum. In comparison, Ethereum’s daily fee income of $507K isn’t particularly impressive.
Strategically, I might consider small long positions on ETH during dips, betting on a potential re-rating of “AI infrastructure” in Q2. But the market is misreading signals: tweet engagement isn’t important; derivatives and continued shorting are the real risks to watch.
Key point: ERC-8004 boosts Ethereum’s positioning as an AI coordination layer, but the 9% retracement shows the hype isn’t early anymore. It’s more suitable for builders and long-term holders to accumulate gradually within this range. Short-term traders should wait for derivatives to turn bullish, daily activity to rebound, and then act.
Conclusion: The AI agent hype is late-stage; but for builders and long-term investors, it’s still “early positioning.” Dips are better for incremental accumulation. Short-term traders and momentum funds are at a disadvantage—wait for funding rates to turn positive, for shorts to cover, and for on-chain user growth to resume; fund managers can cautiously explore with small positions, focusing on Q2 adoption data and derivatives pricing reversals.