TradingKey - The Ethereum Foundation stakes 23,000 ETH, concluding its previous sell-off pattern and providing long-term, stable support for ETH prices.
On March 30, according to Arkham monitoring, the Ethereum Foundation staked $46.2 million worth of ETH, marking the largest single ETH staking transaction in the organization's history. With the current price of ETH at $2,054, this equates to approximately 23,000 ETH, representing a 0.019% share.
ETH price chart, source: TradingView
While this 0.02% stake is marginal, its impact on strategic significance, the staking market, and psychological support should not be underestimated, as follows:
1. On-chain psychological support: For a long time, the Ethereum Foundation has been criticized by the community for "sell signals" due to its periodic sales of ETH to cover development costs. Moving these assets from "sellable inventory" to "long-term locked staking" significantly alleviates market fears of official sell-offs and breaks the negative psychological cycle of "Foundation asset movements equal selling."
2. Staking market share: Currently, the total volume of staked ETH is approximately 36 million (a staking rate of about 30%). The Foundation's 23,000 ETH deposit accounts for roughly 0.064% of the total network staking. This is an above-average level for a single entity, sufficient for it to play a significant "stabilizer" role within decentralized staking pools and exercise more substantial influence.
3. Shift in pricing logic: This will not directly trigger a price surge, but it marks the Ethereum Foundation's official entry into a stage of financial maturity—effectively "living off interest." This provides the strongest official endorsement for ETH's transition into an "interest-bearing asset," leading investors to compare it to bonds rather than purely speculative tokens, which aids in the long-term valuation rerating of ETH.
On March 12, 2026, BlackRock launched its staking-supported ETHB ETF. The Foundation’s significant move further reinforces ETH's financial status as a "digital bond" or interest-bearing asset, drawing market attention and raising questions about whether it is worth emulating. If you are a retail investor or short-term trader seeking to capture short-term volatility, the high liquidity requirements make this approach unsuitable.
However, if you are a long-term holder planning to keep ETH for over a year, staking is a viable path to earn additional yield (approximately 2.8% - 4% APR). It is best not to keep all assets on a single exchange; instead, consider using Distributed Validator Technology (DVT) like the Foundation or joining decentralized staking pools to diversify risk.