BlackRock Eyes Staked Ethereum ETF as Vitalik Buterin Warns of Wall Street Takeover

MarketDash Editorial Team
18 days ago
BlackRock has filed for a staked Ethereum ETF that would offer investors both price exposure and annual staking rewards. But Ethereum's co-founder sees a bigger problem brewing: institutional money is pouring in so fast it could reshape the network around Wall Street's priorities instead of its core mission of decentralization.

Ethereum (ETH) is back above $3,000, which is nice. What's less nice, if you're a purist about these things, is that BlackRock just filed paperwork in Delaware for a staked Ethereum ETF that could accelerate Wall Street's grip on the network.

Bloomberg's Eric Balchunas spotted the registration on Wednesday. This isn't BlackRock's first rodeo—they already run the iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA), which has pulled in $13.1 billion since July 2024. That's just spot ETH exposure, though. The new fund would add staking into the mix, letting investors earn roughly 3.95% annually on top of whatever ETH does price-wise. Think of it as a total-return play for institutions that want yield, not just speculation.

BlackRock had previously asked the SEC to allow staking within ETHA itself. That didn't happen under the old regime, but the Trump administration has been decidedly warmer to crypto, and now staked ETH ETFs from Grayscale and REX-Osprey are already trading. The door is open, and BlackRock is walking through it.

Here's where it gets interesting. At Devconnect in Buenos Aires, Vitalik Buterin delivered one of his bluntest warnings yet about what all this institutional money could mean for Ethereum. Institutions now hold over $18 billion in ETH through ETFs, according to DL News, and projections suggest they could soon control 10% or more of the total supply.

Buterin's concern isn't just about concentration—it's about incentives. Institutional inflows bring legitimacy, sure, but they also risk bending Ethereum toward Wall Street's preferences. "Ethereum optimised for Wall Street becomes an Ethereum that only Wall Street can use," he said. The risk is "community erosion" and technical decisions that prioritize yield products over the network's founding principles: permissionless access, censorship resistance, decentralization.

In other words, Ethereum was built to be a global, neutral protocol. If the people holding the most ETH care more about quarterly returns than those ideals, the whole project could drift in a direction its creators never intended.

BlackRock Eyes Staked Ethereum ETF as Vitalik Buterin Warns of Wall Street Takeover

MarketDash Editorial Team
18 days ago
BlackRock has filed for a staked Ethereum ETF that would offer investors both price exposure and annual staking rewards. But Ethereum's co-founder sees a bigger problem brewing: institutional money is pouring in so fast it could reshape the network around Wall Street's priorities instead of its core mission of decentralization.

Ethereum (ETH) is back above $3,000, which is nice. What's less nice, if you're a purist about these things, is that BlackRock just filed paperwork in Delaware for a staked Ethereum ETF that could accelerate Wall Street's grip on the network.

Bloomberg's Eric Balchunas spotted the registration on Wednesday. This isn't BlackRock's first rodeo—they already run the iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA), which has pulled in $13.1 billion since July 2024. That's just spot ETH exposure, though. The new fund would add staking into the mix, letting investors earn roughly 3.95% annually on top of whatever ETH does price-wise. Think of it as a total-return play for institutions that want yield, not just speculation.

BlackRock had previously asked the SEC to allow staking within ETHA itself. That didn't happen under the old regime, but the Trump administration has been decidedly warmer to crypto, and now staked ETH ETFs from Grayscale and REX-Osprey are already trading. The door is open, and BlackRock is walking through it.

Here's where it gets interesting. At Devconnect in Buenos Aires, Vitalik Buterin delivered one of his bluntest warnings yet about what all this institutional money could mean for Ethereum. Institutions now hold over $18 billion in ETH through ETFs, according to DL News, and projections suggest they could soon control 10% or more of the total supply.

Buterin's concern isn't just about concentration—it's about incentives. Institutional inflows bring legitimacy, sure, but they also risk bending Ethereum toward Wall Street's preferences. "Ethereum optimised for Wall Street becomes an Ethereum that only Wall Street can use," he said. The risk is "community erosion" and technical decisions that prioritize yield products over the network's founding principles: permissionless access, censorship resistance, decentralization.

In other words, Ethereum was built to be a global, neutral protocol. If the people holding the most ETH care more about quarterly returns than those ideals, the whole project could drift in a direction its creators never intended.