Smart Money Flow! Wall Street Giant BlackRock Plays Its "Trump Card," The Compliance Strategy Behind $ETH Staking ETF, Are Other Players in Danger?

On March 12, 2026, the Nasdaq listed a uniquely structured crypto asset trust product. This is the world’s largest asset management company BlackRock’s iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF, ticker symbol ETHB. While it is not the first ETH product in the U.S. market to offer staking yields, its debut is markedly different.

On its first day, the product traded approximately $15.5 million. The next day, trading volume surged to about $76 million. Its assets under management quickly grew from an initial roughly $100 million to approximately $170 million. Behind these numbers is a clear vote of confidence from traditional capital for a compliant, income-generating pathway.

To understand ETHB, first understand the staking mechanism of $ETH. Since the 2022 “Merge” to proof of stake, holders lock $ETH in the network to participate in validation and earn rewards similar to interest. According to real-time network data, the current annualized yield is about 2.78%. For long-term holders, this is a significant incremental return; for institutions managing hundreds of millions of dollars, ignoring it means huge opportunity costs.

ETHB essentially makes this on-chain process compliant and productized. Investors don’t need to research nodes or manage private keys; they can passively earn staking rewards while gaining exposure to $ETH prices through a regular securities account.

Its fee structure has two layers. The first is a management fee of 0.25% annually, reduced to 0.12% during the promotional period (first 12 months or before reaching $25 billion in AUM). The second is a staking reward split: 82% of each reward goes to ETF holders, with 18% paid as staking fees to the trust sponsor and broker-dealer. The sponsor is Coinbase, which also pays fees to validators Figment, Galaxy Digital, and Attestant.

According to filings, ETHB will stake between 70% and 95% of its $ETH holdings via Coinbase Custody. For example, on March 12, 80% of $ETH was staked. After the next day’s expansion, the staking ratio temporarily dropped to 56%.

Here’s a rough calculation: investing $100, assuming a staking ratio of 70%-95% and a network annual yield of 2.78%, rewards would be about $1.95 to $2.64. After deducting 18% staking fee, investors receive $1.60 to $2.17. Further deducting the management fee (standard 0.25% or promotional 0.12%), the final annualized return is approximately 1.35% to 2.05%.

This is not a low-cost product, but it provides a compliant channel for regulated capital to access staking yields without touching the underlying technology. This premium has practical significance for institutional investors.

Looking back at regulatory history, when the first $ETH spot ETFs were approved in 2024, the SEC explicitly prohibited funds from staking, considering it a potential securities issuance. This restriction loosened in May 2025, with guidance allowing staking activities.

Before ETHB, two firms launched similar products but with different approaches. REX-Osprey ETH + Staking ETF (ESK), launched in September 2025, chose the Cayman Islands framework, holding and staking $ETH through a subsidiary to bypass restrictions on direct coin holdings by the main fund.

Grayscale’s Ethereum Staking ETF (ETHE), on the other hand, took an “upgrade” route. Its predecessor was a trust established in 2017, which converted to an ETF in 2024 and activated staking in October 2025 through amendments to listing rules. The cost was inheriting a high annual management fee of up to 2.50%.

BlackRock’s ETHB chose the most straightforward, transparent route: in December 2025, it filed a new S-1 registration statement, simultaneously submitted a 19b-4 rule change application, completed the full approval process for a new product, and listed in March 2026.

It did not take shortcuts or patch an old framework. This most compliant path offers one of the key competitive advantages—significantly lower fees. The 0.25% management fee is notably lower than ETHE’s 2.50% and better than ESK’s structure.

From the moment $ETH shifted from proof of work to proof of stake, it became an “income-generating” asset just by holding. But for most traditional finance participants, technical barriers and compliance issues make this yield path seemingly out of reach.

What BlackRock ETHB has done is encapsulate on-chain staking into a Wall Street–familiar financial wrapper. For earlier entrants like ESK and ETHE, the real competition may just be beginning.


Follow me for more real-time analysis and insights into the crypto market!

#GateSquareAIReview #Bitcoin hits $75,000 $BTC $ETH $SOL #CryptoMarketRising

ETH1.25%
BTC0.67%
SOL0.73%
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin