logo
#

Latest news with #Pectra

Everstake Brings Ethereum Experts Together to Explore Post-Pectra and Institutional Adoption
Everstake Brings Ethereum Experts Together to Explore Post-Pectra and Institutional Adoption

Business Insider

time30-06-2025

  • Business
  • Business Insider

Everstake Brings Ethereum Experts Together to Explore Post-Pectra and Institutional Adoption

Everstake, a leading global non-custodial staking provider serving institutional and retail clients, hosted a special AMA session with Jason Chaskin, Ecosystem Intelligence Lead at the Ethereum Foundation, and Eric Siu, former contributor to ecosystem and special projects at both the Ethereum Foundation and Etherealize, to discuss post-Pectra world and explore whether the protocol is ready to support enterprise-grade participation at scale. The part of the discussion was focused on the evolving role of institutional staking and how Ethereum's infrastructure is adapting to enterprise needs. Since the Pectra upgrade, Ethereum's validator entry queue has grown significantly, now topping 420,000 ETH with more than a week's wait. Meanwhile, infrastructure moves from players like Stripe, which recently acquired the wallet provider Privy, suggest institutions are building infrastructure to support on-chain activity. 'While Pectra wasn't designed exclusively for institutions, upgrades like EIP-7251 do simplify operations for those managing significant capital,' said Eric Siu. 'The broader concerns, like MEV management or regulatory compliance, are solvable off-protocol. The infrastructure is here, and institutions are clearly interested. They just can't afford mistakes.' An official representative of the Ethereum Foundation Jason Chaskin added that Ethereum has organically evolved in a direction that aligns with enterprise standards, even if the terminology differs. - 'What we call decentralization, they might call the absence of counterparty risk. What we describe as modularity or L2 scaling, they interpret as enterprise architecture. Ethereum doesn't need to compromise its principles to meet institutional demand. It's already aligned.' Both speakers concluded that Ethereum is not only technically ready but economically and culturally aligned with institutional priorities so long as it continues to evolve without compromising decentralization. The full discussion on institutional staking is available on Everstake's blog. About the Ethereum Foundation The Ethereum Foundation is a non-profit organization dedicated to the development, improvement, and promotion of Ethereum and related technologies. Established in 2014 with the vision of fostering a decentralized and open-source ecosystem, the Ethereum Foundation plays an important role in supporting the growth of Ethereum and empowering the broader blockchain community. About Everstake Everstake is a leading global non-custodial staking provider serving institutional and retail clients and enabling secure access to over 85 Proof-of-Stake networks. Founded in 2018 by blockchain engineers, the company supports more than 735,000 delegators, $6.5 billion in staked assets, and 40,000+ active validators — delivering institutional-grade infrastructure with 99.9% uptime and zero material slashing events since inception. Trusted by asset managers, custodians, wallets, exchanges, and protocols, Everstake offers API-first, compliant infrastructure backed by SOC 2 Type 2 and ISO 27001:2022 certifications, GDPR compliance, and regular smart contract audits. Its globally distributed team of 100+ professionals is committed to making staking accessible to everyone while strengthening the foundations of decentralized finance. Everstake is a software platform that provides infrastructure tools and resources for users but does not offer investment advice or investment opportunities, manage funds, facilitate collective investment schemes, provide financial services, or take custody of or otherwise hold or manage customer assets. Everstake does not conduct independent diligence or substantive review of any blockchain asset, digital currency, cryptocurrency, or associated funds. Everstake's provision of technology services allowing users to stake digital assets is not an endorsement or a recommendation of any digital asset. Users are fully and solely responsible for evaluating whether to stake digital assets. Contact PR Manager

3 Reasons to Buy Solana Instead of Ethereum and 1 Reason Not To
3 Reasons to Buy Solana Instead of Ethereum and 1 Reason Not To

Yahoo

time29-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

3 Reasons to Buy Solana Instead of Ethereum and 1 Reason Not To

Solana is gaining ground against Ethereum in a few different domains. Its chain is better positioned to win in segments like AI and DePIN. That doesn't mean you should let your expectations for its growth get unmoored. 10 stocks we like better than Ethereum › If Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) is the eight‑lane interstate of smart‑contract blockchains, Solana (CRYPTO: SOL) feels more like a bullet train. Both chains reach the same destinations, but one arrives faster, cheaper, and with fewer inconveniences along the way. That's why many longtime crypto investors are wondering whether now is the moment to swap some Ether for Solana, assuming they haven't already. Solana enjoys three durable edges that even Ethereum's recent Pectra upgrade hasn't erased. Let's take a peek at each and understand why it might be worth hopping onboard with Solana. Solana's chain regularly posts real‑world throughput above 1,000 transactions per second (TPS) and transaction times near 0.4 seconds. In contrast, Ethereum's base layer still crawls at roughly 15 to 30 TPS, and its transactions are trapped within the chain's 12‑second blocks. For users who want snappier performance with Ethereum, it's necessary to bridge capital to one of its layer‑2 (L2) subchains, which is an additional step, plus sometimes it requires different tooling, thereby adding a lot of friction. The raw numbers matter most for latency‑sensitive segments like on‑chain artificial intelligence (AI) and decentralized physical infrastructure networks (DePIN). One Solana‑based DePIN project called Roam crossed 2.5 million registered users in March 2025. A spike in usage of that magnitude would swamp most Ethereum L2s before breakfast, not to mention completely clogging up the main chain. The takeaway here is that Solana is already handling traffic that would immediately break Ethereum's highest‑throughput pipes for everyone. Higher speeds also simplify developer life. Building a real‑time AI data marketplace or a global mapping protocol is easier when a chain's transaction confirmations arrive in under a second, and finality is nearly instantaneous. Ethereum could close the speed gap over time, but Solana owns it today. A typical Solana transaction costs between $0.0001 and $0.0025. Ethereum's layer‑1 average gas fee for a token swap was about $5.55 on the morning of June 25, and it often spikes above $15 when traffic is high. The days of gas fees in the $60 range are probably over, but compared with fees that are nearly free, even a few dollars feels like a lot. For investors, that difference between the two chains compounds quickly. Automated trading bots or decentralized finance (DeFi) strategies that make sense at Solana's fee levels can be dead on arrival on Ethereum. Cheap fees also help to onboard new users -- a demographic every network ultimately needs to thrive. Solana‑based coins captured a lot of attention in 2024 and early 2025; Ethereum's ecosystem, in large part, did not. Part of that gap is technical. Ethereum's 140‑plus alternative layers create liquidity silos, reliance on a plethora of bridges for capital, and an endless pile of unique tooling for basic tasks like wallet access or scanning certificates to verify asset provenance. Solana's monolithic design avoids those headaches. Furthermore, the chain's publicly posted development roadmap emphasizes focusing on throughput bumps, institutional onboarding, and smoother tooling throughout 2025. These narratives matter in crypto. When people believe a chain feels intuitive, the flywheel of builders, users, and capital spins faster. And right now, that reputational tailwind is blowing harder for Solana than for Ethereum. Don't confuse Solana's edge with having explosive upside. At roughly a $77.5 billion market cap versus Ethereum's $290.4 billion, Solana already trades like a blue chip. It isn't a smart move to sell your Ethereum in hopes of investing in Solana and then having that coin subsequently go to the moon. Could it one day overtake Ethereum? Probably. In fact, I'd bet on it happening eventually, at least as of right now. But that would still be "only" a 4X return, not the 100‑bagger fantasy that some holders whisper about. Don't fall for that kind of thinking even if you're optimistic here. Long‑term investors should see Solana as a calculated bet on speed, cost efficiency, and execution, not a ticket to instant riches. Before you buy stock in Ethereum, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Ethereum wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $713,547!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $966,931!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,062% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 177% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 23, 2025 Alex Carchidi has positions in Ethereum and Solana. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Ethereum and Solana. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. 3 Reasons to Buy Solana Instead of Ethereum and 1 Reason Not To was originally published by The Motley Fool

Ethereum's 'Identity Crisis' Is What Real Decentralization Looks Like
Ethereum's 'Identity Crisis' Is What Real Decentralization Looks Like

Yahoo

time26-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Ethereum's 'Identity Crisis' Is What Real Decentralization Looks Like

Ethereum faces widespread perception as a network in crisis. It has been characterized as a platform plagued by governance upheaval, community fragmentation, and high gas fees. Additionally, Ethereum receives a lot of criticism for its slow performance, which lags behind Bitcoin's institutional appeal and Solana's speculative excitement. This narrative misses Ethereum's central purpose and strategy. Both of which are driven by deliberate decentralized innovation, which is now beginning to pay off. Ethereum has chosen the more difficult but ultimately more sustainable path. This is based on the fact that it has maintained functional governance, which enables continued technical advancement. It also preserves credible decentralization, creating competitive advantages that neither pure stability nor pure speed can replicate. This positions Ethereum as the only blockchain capable of long-term sustainable innovation. Concerns around Ethereum's 'identity crisis' reflect a fundamental misunderstanding of what makes blockchain technology valuable in the first place. When critics focus on short-term metrics like transaction costs and processing speed, they're forgetting the revolutionary potential of a truly decentralized computing platform. Ethereum's challenges are the growing pains of building something unprecedented: a global, permissionless computer that no single entity can control or shut down. The high gas fees demonstrate real demand for blockspace on the world's most secure and decentralized smart contract platform. The governance discussions that appear as "upheaval" to outsiders represent healthy democratic processes that other chains avoid by maintaining centralized control, or by effectively forbidding all change and improvement. This nuanced reality gets lost in narratives that prioritize simplicity over substance. Despite being criticised as a digital 'pet rock,' Bitcoin has received widespread respect as the first cryptocurrency to see legitimacy outside of the industry. 'Bitcoin-maxis' even point to the chain's inertia as a critical tenet of bitcoin's value. Since the chain rarely updates, except for predictable supply halvings, bitcoin can remain a 'digital gold.' However, this simplicity is a ceiling, not a strength. Bitcoin has ossified; initially slow to innovate, improvements are now effectively impossible. 'Bitcoin-maxis' would argue that the chain's ossification only strengthens the asset's immutable value. But, bitcoin's liquidity is tenuous; it relies on perception, and recent reports demonstrate that bitcoin's value isn't an inherent certainty. Ethereum, by contrast, continues to evolve through major upgrades like the transition from Proof-of-Work to Proof-of-Stake in 2022 and the recent Pectra update. Unlike Bitcoin, the Ethereum community continues to demonstrate that it is capable of meaningful technological innovation. Many of Ethereum's critics point to the impressive speed and low costs of other chains as examples of where Ethereum is failing. These feats are achieved quickly only by giving up on meaningful decentralization. Ethereum is a credibly neutral world computer with thousands of projects innovating on it precisely because of its ethos of decentralization. Some form of centralized leadership may seem like a small price to pay for quicker change, but decentralization matters in the same way that seat belts do. It's an inconvenience until it's necessary; until an account is de-platformed, or the system makes an unpopular choice because of centralized interests that are not in line with its users' values. History provides countless examples of centralized systems eventually serving their controllers rather than their users - this is such a common pattern it's practically a law. Traditional financial institutions routinely freeze accounts, deny services, or impose arbitrary fees based on political or business considerations. Decentralization is not a long-term goal; it is a foundational necessity for building systems permanently free from corruption. Ethereum has chosen the most technically and socially difficult but correct route: building a truly decentralized platform that serves the needs of its users. That's the hard thing to do, but it's also the right thing to do, because it produces the best result in the long term. This approach is slower than Solana's and less obvious than Bitcoin's, but it's the only path that delivers both continued innovation and genuine user sovereignty. It is beginning to see results, too. Earlier this month, Bernstein analysts published a research report stating that "The narrative around value accrual of public blockchain networks is at a critical inflection point,' and 'starting to reflect in investor interest in ETH ETF inflows." Ethereum price is certainly trending upwards. Ethereum ETFs just completed their longest inflow streak of 2025, with BlackRock's ETHA fund alone adding $492 million in a single week. Meanwhile, Bitcoin ETFs experienced $582 million in net outflows during the same period. Despite this positive momentum, the Ethereum community needs to concern itself less with trailing indicators of success like price. As John Maynard Keynes famously warned, 'the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.' The Ethereum community must avoid getting distracted by price movements, governance drama, or competing narratives and unite around their common mission: building credibly neutral infrastructure that serves humanity's needs. Ethereum's ability to innovate while staying decentralized requires developers, researchers, validators, and users to shut out the noise and remain focused on building. This path is harder, but it's the only one that leads to sustainable success. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Can a $10,000 Investment in Ethereum Turn Into $1 Million By 2030?
Can a $10,000 Investment in Ethereum Turn Into $1 Million By 2030?

Yahoo

time26-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Can a $10,000 Investment in Ethereum Turn Into $1 Million By 2030?

Ethereum has a handful of juicy growth opportunities ahead. It also will face plenty of competition. A lot is riding on the success of its Pectra upgrade. 10 stocks we like better than Ethereum › Turning a single $10,000 check into $1 million in five years is the kind of cocktail party story that gets people fumbling for their phone apps and buy buttons, even if it's completely atypical. Crypto makes that fantasy feel tantalizingly close, because once-in-a-generation runs really do happen on occasion. With Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) trading at about $2,400 today, the question is whether lightning can strike again by 2030, making those who invest $10,000 much richer, or whether investors should settle for a smaller, more conservative shot at a payday. Let's map out what would need to happen. Before dreaming of seven-figure bragging rights, let's run the numbers. A $10,000 stake in Ethereum morphing into $1 million requires a 100-fold rally over the next five years. That is not realistic in any way. Such growth would leave Ethereum with a market cap of roughly $28 trillion compared to the current $290 billion. That's nearly the size of the entire U.S. commercial banking sector and about 25% of current world gross domestic product (GDP), which is about $113.8 trillion. Nothing in finance is impossible, but hitting even 20% of that valuation means everything must go Ethereum's way and stay that way for half a decade. It would need consistent global liquidity, friendly regulators, no fatal bugs or devastating chainwide hacks, and no rival chain stealing its thunder. Even the coin's evangelists should admit that the odds are very long here. Nonetheless, the coin could still be worth vastly more in the future than it is today. On that front, near-term execution of the chain's priorities still matters, and Pectra, Ethereum's latest major upgrade, is a big deal. It bundles 11 improvements ranging from smart-wallet functionality to cheaper roll-up data, plus smoother staking exits. This should make the chain cheaper, faster, more secure, and less of a headache for its users as well. If Pectra continues to roll out cleanly during its next phase, and if developers start churning out useful new decentralized finance (DeFi) applications using the new feature set, it could trigger faster growth than it has experienced in 2025 so far, when it has fallen by 28%. A more grounded question is whether $10,000 could become about $100,000 by 2030 by investing in Ethereum. That's a 10-fold gain, and it would leave Ethereum worth a bit less than $3 trillion. Such a growth target is still ambitious, but history shows that blue chip cryptocurrencies occasionally deliver that scale of outperformance when the macro setup and their fundamentals are both favorable. Pectra is the first domino. By hard-coding smart wallet hooks and lowering roll-up data costs, it could make using Ethereum feel like a normal fintech app instead of a weekend coding project. That would attract more institutional capital, and help retain the existing capital on the chain. The upgrade also tweaks staking economics, raising the validator cap so more investors can earn yield on locked-up coins, thereby shrinking liquid supply and applying gentle upward price pressure if demand holds. More capital could flow into the chain to earn a yield. Fresh segments are also arriving. Crypto projects that serve artificial intelligence (AI) workloads have flocked to Ethereum-compatible ecosystems, propelling AI-linked tokens earlier this year. As the AI boom continues to take off, Ethereum is one of the most obvious places for activity to occur, given its smart contract infrastructure. Furthermore, decentralized physical infrastructure networks (DePIN) -- think blockchain-coordinated data centers or sensor grids -- carry a combined market cap north of $50 billion today. But it could be worth as much as $3.5 trillion by 2028, so it's a lucrative growth segment. And many of those DePIN projects settle payments or issue assets on Ethereum or its Layer-2 chains. If Ethereum executes Pectra cleanly and captures a healthy chunk of the capital flowing into the AI and DePIN segments, a 10-fold gain moves from fanciful to at least somewhat feasible. Add the structural tailwinds of staking-driven float reduction, and the coin generating big returns over the next five years looks more likely than not. With all of that said, investors need to brace themselves for gut-churning volatility and real competitive risks. Faster or cheaper chains with better tooling for developers could easily derail the journey. Owning Ethereum still makes sense for a diversified portfolio, but not because it's a guaranteed ticket to millionaire status. Before you buy stock in Ethereum, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Ethereum wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $689,813!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $906,556!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 809% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 175% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 23, 2025 Alex Carchidi has positions in Ethereum. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Ethereum. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Can a $10,000 Investment in Ethereum Turn Into $1 Million By 2030? was originally published by The Motley Fool Sign in to access your portfolio

4 Reasons Ethereum's 44% Rally Could Just Be Starting
4 Reasons Ethereum's 44% Rally Could Just Be Starting

Yahoo

time19-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

4 Reasons Ethereum's 44% Rally Could Just Be Starting

Ethereum is looking like it's in the process of a turnaround. It just got a major upgrade, and investors are keeping their capital on the chain. The macro environment also looks favorable at the moment. 10 stocks we like better than Ethereum › The market loves a good comeback story, and right now Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) is auditioning for the lead role. After spending most of 2023 and 2024 lagging other major cryptocurrencies, Ethereum has surged roughly 30% during the past 90 days. There's reason to believe that this move is not just another speculative pop. There are four catalysts that look built to last. If those forces keep pulling in the same direction, the rally may be only the opening act. Let's check them out and understand how they fit into the coin's longer-term picture. Ethereum, like all cryptocurrencies, is very sensitive to macroeconomic phenomena like inflation and the money supply. On that front, things are looking pretty good right now. May's Consumer Price Index (CPI) showed inflation running at 2.4%, the lowest readout since early 2023. That reading boosts the odds that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates later this year, which will make it cheaper for banks to borrow money, and thus more likely that investors will need to look further down the risk curve, toward crypto, to get a return beyond the cost of borrowing. In short, lower rates have historically tended to nudge investors out of cash and into longer‑duration bets like crypto. Markets are already leaning that way. The U.S. dollar index, which tracks the strength of the dollar relative to other currencies, just slipped to a three‑year low on expectations of easier money. Cheaper dollars make dollar‑denominated assets with fixed supplies look more attractive, and Ethereum fits that bill. When the biggest wallets start buying, price moves can snowball. And there aren't any players with bigger wallets than institutional investors like pension funds and hedge funds. During the week of May 13, $205 million flowed into Ethereum‑linked products, making for the strongest haul since early 2024, and about 25% of all crypto exchange-traded product (ETP) inflows. The momentum kept rolling; by mid‑June, Ethereum exchange‑traded funds (ETFs) had logged a 16‑day intake streak worth almost $900 million. Pension funds and ETF sponsors are not day traders. Their allocations typically stay parked for multiple quarters or even years, effectively removing supply from the market and signaling that the fear that dominated late 2024 is fading. And that's bullish for Ethereum, because they hold it now. Slated for activation in late 2025, Pectra is Ethereum's biggest technology overhaul in recent years. The package rolls 11 improvement proposals into one release that simplifies wallets and smooths out gas (user) fee volatility via a variety of mechanisms. Pectra tackles three persistent pain points in one go: user‑friendliness, account security, and unpredictable transaction costs. If its second phase has the intended affects when it launches later this year as planned, it could also help the network to scale, keeping costs lower and improving transaction times. History suggests that every time Ethereum reduces friction, developer activity and on‑chain demand rise soon after, both of which tend to lift prices. While Pectra cooks, Ethereum staking is already squeezing supply. On June 11, staked Ethereum coins hit a record 34.6 million, accounting for roughly 29% of circulating supply, and up from 26% a year ago. Importantly, the staking share of total supply keeps rising even as the coin's price climbs, suggesting holders prefer yield to speculation. That means investors see that they can get a more attractive return by leaving their capital parked in staked coins rather than transferring it elsewhere, which in turn ensures that more value is stored on the chain, boosting the coin's price. The reason for this is that staked coins cannot be sold without first exiting a validator queue, which can take days. Layering on Pectra's validator simplifications, which are expected to make staking cheaper and easier, it is plausible that 35% or even 40% of all Ethereum coins could be bonded for yield within a year. A shrinking float (coin available for public trading) paired with growing demand is a classic recipe for sustained price strength, as it forces buyers to compete with each other in the form of bidding higher prices to secure coins of their own. Still, investors should take note that none of these four forces I've mentioned guarantees a straight‑line ascent. A macro shock or an unexpected bug in Pectra could smash confidence fast. Yet if inflation keeps easing, institutions keep allocating, the upgrade continues to land smoothly, and staking continues to grow, Ethereum's risk‑reward profile looks far stronger than it did six months ago. Before you buy stock in Ethereum, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Ethereum wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $658,297!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $883,386!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 992% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 172% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 9, 2025 Alex Carchidi has positions in Ethereum. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Ethereum. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. 4 Reasons Ethereum's 44% Rally Could Just Be Starting was originally published by The Motley Fool Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store