The price of Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap, has spiked over 10% in the last 24 hours to secure a new all-time high—just two days after eclipsing its previous record.
The new all-time high for ETH is $4,416.05, according to data from CoinGecko.
On Tuesday, October 26, ETH coasted to nearly $4,300 before declining all the way back to below $4,000. But yesterday, the network underwent its third upgrade in seven months, bringing Ethereum 2.0—a faster, more secure network—once step closer to fruition.
The price of the asset has also benefitted from an August network upgrade—the London hard fork—which instituted a deflationary mechanism. Instead of paying fees to miners, who currently process transactions on the network, users now pay a base fee to the network—which promptly destroys it. Since reducing the rate of supply growth on the network, ETH has ascended from the mid-$2,000s to its current highs.

Ethereum Altair Upgrade Quietly Goes Live—Unlike Previous Hard Forks
On Wednesday, the Ethereum blockchain underwent its third upgrade in seven months. And unlike the previous two upgrades, things have gone smoothly so far. The Altair upgrade was the first (and perhaps last) upgrade to the Beacon chain before Ethereum fully transitions to a proof-of-stake network. The Beacon chain, which introduced ETH staking and set the table for "shard chains" that expand the network's capacity, runs alongside the current Ethereum chain but will remain separate from it until "...
Meanwhile, Ethereum traders have been expecting the asset to extend its bull run. According to Bybt, over $1.2 billion in ETH options are set to expire Friday. More than half of the bets on the future price of the asset (by the October 29 deadline) wagered it to go above $4,500.
If that happens, it will be a new record for an asset that's been setting them all year.