Something interesting just happened in the world of crypto ETFs. Grayscale Ethereum Staking ETF (ETHE) has made its first distribution to shareholders, and it's not your typical dividend check. This is staking income, straight from Ethereum's proof-of-stake network, landing in the accounts of regular ETF investors for the first time in a U.S.-listed product.
Grayscale announced that ETHE distributed proceeds from Ethereum staking rewards earned between October 6, 2025, and December 31, 2025. Shareholders received $0.083178 per share, paid out on Tuesday based on holdings as of the January 5 record date. It's a modest payout, but the significance isn't really about the dollar amount.
This marks the first time a spot crypto exchange-traded product in the U.S. has actually sent staking rewards back to investors. Until now, staking income has been one of those features that existed in the crypto world but didn't really make it into traditional ETF wrappers. Ethereum moved to proof-of-stake years ago, but regulatory uncertainty kept most issuers from touching staking with a ten-foot pole.
That changed last October when ETHE and its smaller sibling, Grayscale Ethereum Staking Mini ETF (ETH), started staking their Ethereum holdings after getting regulatory clarity. Both funds got renamed on Monday to reflect this new staking-enabled structure. They used to be called the Grayscale Ethereum Trust ETF and Grayscale Ethereum Mini Trust ETF, but those names didn't really capture what was happening under the hood anymore.
Here's where things get a little different from your standard equity or bond fund. ETHE and ETH aren't registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940. That's the regulatory framework that governs most mutual funds and ETFs, and it comes with specific investor protections. These funds don't have those protections, which means they carry extra risks like price volatility, operational complexity, and yes, the potential to lose your principal. You're holding shares of a fund that holds Ethereum, but you don't directly own the cryptocurrency itself.
The distribution comes from selling staking rewards, not from dividends or interest in the traditional sense. It's another example of how crypto products keep bending the categories we use for asset classes. For investors, the payout might help offset management fees or tracking error, but it doesn't change the fundamental risk that Ethereum's price could swing wildly in either direction.
Grayscale has hinted that staking distributions could become a regular thing for eligible products, though it depends on network conditions and regulatory developments. If this catches on more broadly, staking-enabled ETFs could shift how people think about generating income from crypto holdings. Just don't expect the consistency you'd get from a bond coupon. Variability is the name of the game here.




