- Despite initial comparisons to Bitcoin ETFs’ historic launch making Ethereum ETFs seem underwhelming, BlackRock’s Robbie Mitchnick emphasises they’ve performed strongly with BlackRock’s ETHA alone attracting US$4 billion in six months.
- However, the absence of staking capabilities in current Ethereum ETFs significantly limits their appeal, as staking yields represent a “meaningful part” of potential investment returns in the cryptocurrency space.
- Implementing staking within ETF structures presents “fairly complex challenges” that can’t be solved with simple regulatory approval, but would drive substantial growth if resolved.
- At the Digital Asset Summit, Donald Trump made a brief appearance reaffirming his administration would end the “war on crypto”, though without announcing specific new policies.
Compared to the launch of the US Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs), the start of Ethereum’s ETFs might seem a bit “meh”, as BlackRock’s, Robbie Mitchnick described it.
The firm’s head of digital assets said at the Digital Asset Summit (DAS) in New York City that this would be a misconception, as the funds have performed quite well on their own. Also, the Bitcoin ETFs had one of the best launches in history, so it’s a little unfair to compare them side-by-side.
ETHA [the] iShares Ethereum trust, had $4 billion in inflows in its first six months. The number of ETFs historically who have had more than this is a very short list.

Fidelity’s FETH and Bitwise’s ETHW also had impressive inflows with US$1.4 billion (AU$2.2 billion) and US$320 million (AU$507.9 million) respectively.
Despite the US$4.1 billion (AU$6.5 billion) net outflows from Grayscale’s ETH fund – which has been trading for a longer period and charges higher fees – the combined net inflows into these Ether ETFs still sum up to an impactful US$2.45 billion (AU$3.89 billion).


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Staking Could Improve ETFs in “Meaningful” Way
Mitchnick believes that the ETFs would have done better though if they had included staking, without, the launch was “less perfect”, he said.
A staking yield is a meaningful part of how you can generate investment return in this space. And all the [Ether] ETFs, of course, at launch did not have staking.


Staking ETH is possible since the network moved from proof-of-work (PoW) – like Bitcoin and Dogecoin – to proof-of-stake (PoS) in 2020.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin explained PoS in a post in 2016:
Validators put money (“deposits”) at stake, are rewarded slightly to compensate them for locking up their capital and maintaining nodes and taking extra precaution to ensure their private key safety.


But PoS is also about balancing rewards with penalties, i.e. for actions that could harm the network. He said as such “the bulk of the cost of reverting transactions comes from penalties that are hundreds or thousands of times larger than the rewards that they [validators] got in the meantime”.
Can it Be Fixed?
So, surely with Donald Trump’s positive stance on the sector and his push for change in crypto, it’s an easy fix, right?
Well, according to Mitchnick, it’s not as easy as the new administration just “green-lighting something and then boom, we’re all good, off to the races”.
He explained that staking in an ETF poses “fairly complex challenges”, which need to be worked out first, but once done…
…then it’s going to be sort of a step change upward in terms of what we see the activity around those products is.


Trump Makes Brief Appearance at Summit
Trump did also make an appearance at the DAS, although he didn’t make any new announcements. The US President said his administration would end the Biden-era “war on crypto and Bitcoin”, adding that crypto is already “as big as you can get”.
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