
Fundstrat co-founder Tom Lee said rising oil prices have become a key reason behind Ethereum’s recent selling pressure.
Summary
- Tom Lee said higher oil pressures ETH as crude prices trade near major 2026 highs.
- crypto.news reported whale exchange deposits, ETF outflows and rising reserves adding near-term Ethereum supply pressure.
- Lee still pointed to tokenization and agentic AI as longer-term drivers for future Ethereum demand.
In a May 18 post on X, Lee said ETH’s inverse link with oil had reached its highest level on record. He described rising crude prices as the market’s largest short-term headwind for Ether.
Lee said oil has climbed over the past six weeks while ETH has moved lower. He added that a pullback in crude would support an ETH recovery. He called the move “short-term tactical noise” and said Ethereum’s larger 2026 drivers remain tokenization and agentic AI.
Crude rally adds pressure to risk assets
Oil prices moved higher on May 18 as Middle East tensions kept energy markets under pressure. Brent crude touched $112, while WTI reached $108.70 after fresh regional attacks raised supply concerns.
The oil move came as Ether (ETH) traded near $2,115, down on the day, with an intraday low near $2,107, according to live market data. Higher energy prices often raise inflation concerns, which can reduce demand for risk assets such as crypto.
Lee’s view marks a change from an earlier Ethereum thesis. In April, crypto.news reported that Lee had described Ethereum as a strong wartime asset, saying ETH had outperformed Bitcoin and stocks during the Middle East conflict.
Other ETH selling factors remain in focus
Separate market updates show that oil is not the only pressure point for Ethereum. crypto.news reported last week that Ethereum whale Garrett Jin moved 577,896 ETH worth about $1.35 billion to Binance over four days. A transfer to an exchange does not confirm a sale, but it can raise supply concerns.
The same report said Ethereum exchange reserves rose from 14.36 million ETH on May 5 to 14.95 million ETH in the following days. It also noted that U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs saw $103.6 million in net outflows on May 7, ending a four-day inflow run.
Tokenization and AI remain Lee’s longer-term focus
Lee said Ethereum’s larger story remains tied to tokenization and agentic AI. Tokenization has become a major theme across traditional finance, with banks and market infrastructure firms testing blockchain-based settlement and fund products.
Recent crypto.news coverage also showed that major firms continue to build in these areas. Fidelity International launched a tokenized fund, while earlier reports noted JPMorgan’s Ethereum-based tokenized money market fund filing.
The AI payments theme is also growing. crypto.news reported that Solana and Google Cloud launched Pay.sh, a stablecoin payment gateway for AI agents. That trend supports Lee’s view that agentic AI may increase demand for crypto-based payment rails, though ETH’s near-term price still faces oil, ETF and whale-related pressure.