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London’s impact: Ethereum 2.0’s staking contract becomes largest ETH holder

The aftereffects of the London upgrade begin to emerge as the Eth2 staking contract becomes the single largest Ether holder.

Recently, the Ethereum network reached a new staking milestone. On Aug. 17, the Ethereum 2.0 staking contract became the single largest holder of Ether (ETH), surpassing Wrapped Ether (WETH). According to data from Etherscan, the Eth2 deposit contract now holds over 7.14 million Ether tokens, valued at $23 billion at the time of writing.

This accounts for nearly 6.1% of all Ether tokens in circulation, which means that the staking rate for Ethereum is now over 6%. The Wrapped Ether deposit contract comes in second, holding 6.97 million tokens — i.e., 5.94% of all Ether. Data from Beaconcha.in reveals that there are now 217,354 validators on the Ethereum network.

Right away, this has made Ether the third most staked cryptocurrency. According to data from Staking Rewards, the Ethereum 2.0 deposit contract ranks third, just after Cardano and Solana, which have been proof-of-stake (PoS) blockchains since their inception. In contrast to the $23 billion in ETH staked, there is over $26 billion worth of SOL staked and $63 billion in ADA staked on their respective networks. 

Pete Humiston, manager of Kraken Intelligence — the research department of the Kraken exchange — told Cointelegraph about these different blockchains:

“Ether’s market cap is well over $350 billion: many multiples above both Solana and Cardano. SOL and ADA may well have a larger share staked compared to the 5.7% of ETH on ETH 2.0, but the sheer size of Ethereum means it is all but inevitable it will surpass both as ETH 2.0 continues apace.”

Ether staking only in nascent stage

Ether staking is already reaching milestones and is rising through the ranks, even though staking on the Ethereum network is still in its nascent stage. All the Ether currently deposited in the Eth2 deposit contract is locked and can be withdrawn only after the Beacon Chain merges into the main Ethereum network — the final stage of its transition to a PoS consensus mechanism. 

Rick Delaney, senior analyst at OKEx Insights — the research team at cryptocurrency exchange OKEx — spoke with Cointelegraph regarding whether the transition could end up being slowed down. He stated:

“A few factors are likely to slow uptake, including the requirement to lock capital on the Beacon Chain, centralized staking service risk, ETH’s more expansive DApp [decentralized application] ecosystem enabling additional opportunities to generate returns and the protocol risk accompanying any major network upgrade.”

This staking milestone for Ethereum comes on the heels of a major event in the transformation of the blockchain, the London hard fork. The London upgrade went live on the network on Aug. 5, bringing in the highly anticipated Ethereum Improvement Proposal (EIP) 1559, along with four other EIPs: EIP-3554, EIP-3541, EIP-3198 and EIP-3529.

EIP-1559 brought a change in the transaction pricing mechanism that eventually reduced the inflation rate of the token and decreased miners’ revenues from transaction fees. This upgrade is the penultimate step leading to the final merge of the Eth1 and Eth2 chains scheduled for 2022. 

Related: Ethereum’s London hard fork sets ETH on a more deflationary path

Humiston mentioned that the reduction in ETH’s inflation makes it a much more scarce asset than it would have been otherwise. The inflation schedule will change yet again once the final transformation to PoS takes place. He said:

“If the ETH burned offsets that issued under PoS, ETH will become a deflationary asset. Should demand stay at current levels, then we can assume that the price of ETH will likely rise, all else remaining constant.”

This price increase could lead to a positive feedback loop, as a higher price could give a push to innovation and development within the ecosystem, which would then lead to greater network usage and entail that even more ETH is burned under this EIP. In addition to the reduction in selling pressure on ETH over the short- to mid-term leading to higher ETH prices, there are other aspects that need to be considered.

Delaney pointed out that miners currently sell ETH to cover their electricity and hardware costs, but once the network is entirely secured by stakers, even the miners will be incentivized to hoard ETH. He said, “Meanwhile, network users’ ETH will disappear from circulation via 1559’s burn mechanism. While the resulting supply shock will likely send ETH to the proverbial moon, it may have a centralizing effect on the network’s validator structure and wealth concentration.”

CEO of on-chain analytics service CryptoQuant, Ki Young Ju, mentioned in a tweet that a sell-side “liquidity crisis” could push ETH past Bitcoin (BTC) in terms of price. Cointelegraph discussed this with Andrew Keys, founder of ConsenSys Capital and co-founder managing partner of Darma Capital, who acknowledged that while there will be a supply reduction, “to call it a ‘liquidity crisis’ might be overstating it.” He further stated:

“That reduction in the supply of the token, coupled with Ethereum’s greater scalability and its larger developer community should lead to the price of ETH eclipsing the price of BTC in the next 24 months.”

The flippening narrative

In the aftermath of the London upgrade, in addition to the increased interest witnessed in the Eth2 staking contract, the price of the token also has seen huge gains. In the past week, ETH has posted 10.58% gains and in the past month has posted 51.80% gains. This surpassed the 42% gains Bitcoin has over the last 30 days. 

This incremental difference in price appreciation has brought back the “flippening” narrative to the conscience of the cryptoverse. Nigel Green, CEO and founder of the deVere Group — one of the world’s largest independent financial consulting organizations — has stated that he expects ETH to continue to outperform BTC over the remainder of the year. He also mentioned that within the next five years, the value of Ether will exceed that of Bitcoin, adding, “Ethereum’s ascent to the top of the cryptoverse seems unstoppable.”

Coinbase’s second-quarter earnings release recently revealed that the volume of ETH traded on the platform has surpassed BTC for the first time in the nine years — since the inception of the platform. Even one of the most prominent cryptocurrency hardware wallets, Ledger, has announced the integration of an accessible staking option through Ledger Live, which could lead to higher retail levels of interest in staking on the network, thus feeding into the frenzy about Ethereum as a whole, a dynamic usually reserved for Bitcoin.

Delaney further spoke on the possibilities of a flippening event. He said, “Given their respective use cases today — BTC as a store of value and ETH being required to interact with smart contracts — it seems likely that ETH trading volume will eventually surpass BTC.” In addition to trading, DApp service consumers would need to purchase ETH to interact with them. This is a stark contrast, as most of the BTC supply still sits in cold storage. He added: 

“Efforts like the Lido integration with Ledger make staking Ethereum more attractive to those concerned about centralized staking service risks and fees, capital lockup requirements, technical barriers to entry and security. These factors, combined with the fact that users can stake less than the 32 ETH required to run an independent validating node, should see staking participation grow.”

The rise in total value locked (TVL) across decentralized finance (DeFi) apps and the nonfungible token (NFT) boom provide evidence of strong Ethereum usage. According to data from DappRadar, the TVL in DeFi spiked 19% from the pre-hard fork levels near $102 billion on Aug. 4 to currently standing at $122.6 billion. This usage could increase even more if the ongoing network transition successfully reduces the gas price and increases scalability as intended.

Related: Staking will eat proof-of-work for breakfast — Here’s why

Keys commented that Ethereum leads Bitcoin in every metric apart from market capitalization and trading volumes and that it’s only a matter of time before ETH surpasses BTC in those metrics too. He added, “The Ethereum ecosystem is the largest ecosystem supporting blockchain applications, with 95% of all blockchain-based applications built there.”

Whether ETH will flip BTC in the short term remains to be seen, but Ethereum 2.0 could trigger a renewed interest in the cryptocurrency industry as a whole, even from traditional financial markets. As revealed in a JPMorgan Chase report, Ethereum could take its staking yields to $20 billion by 2022 and to $40 billion by 2025. This is yet another encouraging sign that reinforces the sustained demand for Ethereum.

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Ethereum supply shock: Exchange ETH reserves continue to fall after a 26% drop in 2021

To date, 92,595 ETH have been burned following Ethereum's London hard fork upgrade.

The amount of Ether (ETH) held by all cryptocurrency exchanges has declined dramatically in the previous 12 months.

Blockchain analytics firm CryptoQuant reported that Ethereum reserves on trading platforms dropped 26.29 million ETH to 19.22 million ETH year-on-year (YoY), indicating that traders' preference to hold their tokens increased.

At least the Ether price performance in the same period indicates the same. Between August 25, 2020, and press time, the ETH/USD exchange rate exploded by a little over 730%— from $407 to $3,190, signaling an erratic inverse correlation between the Ethereum token prices and its reserves across all exchanges.

Ethereum reserves versus ETH/USD price performance YoY. Source: CryptoQuant

In detail, traders typically prefer to keep their crypto assets on exchange wallets when they wish to trade them in the near term. Otherwise, they move those assets to private wallets to control their own keys, a strategy that stems from the fears of losing funds to hacks and similar security breaches at crypto exchanges.

Ether deposits plunge

Another on-chain indicator, built by CoinMetrics to track the total number of Ether deposits to exchanges, also alerted holding sentiment among Ethereum traders. It noted that traders' ETH deposits across all the trading platforms had plunged 21.11% YoY, from 413,772 ETH to 326,408.

Ethereum deposits on exchanges. Source: CoinMetrics, Messari

But in the last 30 days, the ETH deposits have dropped dramatically by 47.81%, signaling that many investors are expecting higher prices in the long term.

Meanwhile, the sum count of unique addresses holding any amount of Ether in the last 30 days has jumped 1.67%, coinciding with a 42% ETH/USD rally in the same period. On a YoY timeframe, the unique address count has jumped 30.87%.

Ethereum address count. Source: CoinMetrics, Messari

Supply Squeeze

The Ether holding sentiment has picked momentum in days leading up to and after a landmark Ethereum network upgrade on August 5, 2021. Dubbed as the London Hard Fork, the software update implemented a proposal called EIP-1559 that enabled gas fee burning on the Ethereum network.

This has added deflationary pressure as a result. In the first 20 days after EIP-1559 went live, the network has burned almost 92,595 ETH worth around $295.85 million, according to WatchTheBurn.com.

Related: Ethereum ‘liquidity crisis’ could see new ETH all-time high before Bitcoin — Analyst

More Ether went out of active supply as Ethereum invited participants to deposit 32 ETH to become validator on its upcoming proof-of-stake blockchain. Beacon Chain reports that the so-called Ethereum 2.0 smart contract has attracted a little over 6.9 million ETH worth around $22 billion.

Staked Ether in Ethereum 2.0 smart contract. Source: BeconCha.in

Additionally, demand for Ether continues to grow owing to Ethereum's expanding ecosystem, containing projects from the booming decentralized finance (DeFi) and nonfungible token sectors. 

Last week, Lyn Alden, the founder Lyn Alden Investment Strategy, called the London upgrade a "tactically bullish" event, noting that it could easily push ETH/USD rates to over $5,000.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Publicly Listed Chinese Firm SOS Commits $50 Million to Bitcoin Investment Amid Market Surge

Swiss B2B bank InCore launches new tokenization tool using Tezos

InCore Bank also announced the upcoming launch of Tezos custody, staking and trading services targeting financial institutions.

Deutsche Boerse-backed digital asset firm Crypto Finance AG and Swiss business-to-business (B2B) transaction bank InCore are launching a new tokenization tool based on the Tezos blockchain.

InCore Bank officially announced Tuesday a new collaboration with Crypto Finance AG and Swiss IT consulting firm Inacta to introduce new digital financial products based on Tezos, a decentralized, open-source proof-of-stake (PoS) blockchain network.

The involved companies have developed a new Tezos token standard for asset tokenization built on the Tezos FA2 standard, a multi-asset interface for Tezos allowing developers to invent token types like nonfungible tokens (NFTs).

Using the Tezos FA2, Inacta developed the new DAR-1 token standard, which aims to unlock new smart contracts-enabled functions to support financial markets, including Anti-Money Laundering (AML) regulations mechanisms as well as asset governance. 

In conjunction with the tokenization tool, InCore Bank also announced the upcoming launch of institutional-grade storage, staking and trading services for Tezos (XTZ). Using InCore Bank’s integrated services, financial institutions will be able to offer staking for their clients’ assets, allowing them to earn rewards generated through staking, or participating in transaction validation through locking up XTZ tokens.

Related: Fintech company Leonteq expands crypto offerings in Europe

Stijn Vander Straeten, CEO of storage infrastructure at the Crypto Finance Group, said that the new collaboration is an example of how FA2 on Tezos significantly expands tokenization opportunities. “The launch of these Tezos use cases for the financial sector make innovative, compliant on-chain financial products a reality today,” the executive added.

Publicly Listed Chinese Firm SOS Commits $50 Million to Bitcoin Investment Amid Market Surge

Ethereum Outpacing Bitcoin to New Record High, According to CryptoQuant CEO

The CEO of on-chain analysis firm CryptoQuant, Ki Young Ju, thinks that Ethereum (ETH) could outperform Bitcoin (BTC) over the long term. Ki Young Ju tells his 239,700 followers that Ethereum could hit a new record high before Bitcoin does. Part of the CEO’s reasoning is that Ethereum is closer to its all-time high (ATH) relative […]

The post Ethereum Outpacing Bitcoin to New Record High, According to CryptoQuant CEO appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

Publicly Listed Chinese Firm SOS Commits $50 Million to Bitcoin Investment Amid Market Surge

3 developments signal that Verasity (VRA) price may have bottomed

Attractive staking offers, a patented approach to combating NFT fraud and an active user base all suggest that VRA price has bottomed following its May lows.

The marketwide sell-off on May 19 triggered a 55% decline in the price of Bitcoin (BTC), and altcoins were hit even harder, with some tokens seeing declines of up to 90%.

One project whose native token price appears to have bottomed out after an 87% decline from its all-time high is Verasity, an e-sports-focused blockchain protocol focused on increasing engagement and advertising revenues for video publishers.

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView shows that after declining from a high at $0.0558 on April 17 to a low of $0.0073 on July 20, the price of Verasity's VRA token has rallied 230% to an intraday high at $0.024 on Aug. 17 as its 24-hour trading volume steadily increases. 

VRA/USD 1-daychart. Source: TradingView

Three reasons the price of VRA may begin to climb higher after its recent low include an active community, the addition of NFT language to the protocol's proof-of-view patent for fraud prevention and attractive staking rewards that incentivize tokenholders to remove their coins from circulation.

Community activity adds a use case

An active community of supporters is one of the best assets a cryptocurrency project can have, as they can help drive significant integrations and attract new partnerships to the ecosystem.

The Verasity community recently voted to integrate VRA as a form of payment on Shopping.io, a crypto e-commerce website that allows users to make purchases from numerous online retailers including Amazon and eBay.

Now, content creators who earn VRA can spend their earnings at their favorite e-commerce websites instead of having to first trade them for another currency.

This adds a new use case to the VRA token and helps to increase token velocity.

NFTs integrate with the proof-of-view protocol

Another significant development from Verasity has been its proof-of-view protocol, which was originally developed to allow users to differentiate between real and fake views on the blockchain and was subsequently granted a United States patent.

Since launching, the use cases for proof-of-view have increased, and the Verasity team extended the original patent to include nonfungible tokens (NFT), one of the fastest-growing sectors in the financial technology sector.

The addition of NFTs to the proof-of-view protocol has the potential to bring a new level of fraud prevention to the popular sector, as well as to bring new users to the Verasity platform.

Related: NFTs are a game changer for independent artists and musicians

Staking options decrease VRA's circulating supply

A third factor putting positive pressure on the price of VRA is the attractive staking rewards offered to users who lock their tokens on the protocol.

Staking tokens on the network is a benefit to the protocol because they are used as part of the consensus mechanism that helps keep the network functioning properly. Similar to most staking platforms, stakers receive rewards in exchange for removing tokens from the circulating supply.

VRA holders can currently earn a daily yield of 0.07%, which amounts to an annual yield of 25.55% if they stake their tokens on the network. The current reward capacity is 2,500,000,000 VRA, or 24% of the total circulating supply.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Publicly Listed Chinese Firm SOS Commits $50 Million to Bitcoin Investment Amid Market Surge

Staking will eat blockchain for breakfast — Here’s why

The market for staking has accelerated rapidly recently, and a shift to PoS will ensure that the blockchain ecosystem is more resilient.

In early July, JPMorgan released a report in which two of the bank’s analysts projected that the staking industry would be worth $40 billion in rewards by 2025. The report anticipates that once the Ethereum 2.0 network completes its transition from proof-of-work (PoW) to proof-of-stake (PoS,) payouts will more than double, up to $20 million from the current $9 million. Within the next four years, it will double again.

With the rapid rise of staking over the last few years, it’s hardly surprising that traditional finance analysts are starting to take note. While the JPMorgan analysts are correct that the market will continue to grow, however, even $40 billion could be a conservative estimate.

If that seems ambitious, then consider how quickly the current market for staking has accelerated over the last few years. Of the top six staking platforms, only Cosmos and Algorand launched staking before 2020. The other four — Cardano, Ethereum 2.0, Solana and Polkadot — only went live with their variation of PoS over the last fifteen months or so. Furthermore, those platforms now account for around half of the total staked value.

Related: ​​The staking race: Late entrant Ethereum lags behind rivals with Eth2

In the wake of this dramatic growth, venture capital (VC) investment is pouring into the crypto space. As one of crypto’s proven growth segments, decentralized finance (DeFi) is currently attracting the kind of investment that is making mainstream headlines. The Financial Times reports that private investors have already backed 72 DeFi companies this year, outpacing 2020 even before the year is halfway through.

The vast majority of these DeFi apps are based on PoS platforms, indicating that we can see traffic levels on those networks increase exponentially over the coming months and years. More traffic means more fees which means more generous rewards for validators and stakers, making staking a no-brainer for generating passive income.

PoW proves vulnerable to mining clampdowns

The reasons why projects are turning to PoS hardly need revisiting. Ethereum’s scalability problems under PoW are well-documented and much-discussed. PoS offers the opportunity for faster throughput and lower fees. However, recent events underscore more than ever why PoW is no longer fit for purpose.

As the Chinese authorities have taken Draconian steps to outlaw cryptocurrencies, miners have staged a mass exodus to avoid falling foul to the law. Some have migrated across international boundaries and some have dumped their mining equipment on the market, resulting in Bitmain halting shipping of its newest models.

It’s to Bitcoin’s (BTC) credit that the price has held as well as it has, indicating the resilience and maturity of the crypto markets.

However, the events in China have underscored that PoW is vulnerable to the kind of censorship that blockchain aims to resist. Bitcoin’s power consumption proved to be its biggest weakness over recent weeks, and it’s a scenario that could repeat in any other country where PoW miners choose to exploit low-cost electricity.

The climate controversy

Bitcoin’s energy consumption also has another Achilles Heel, and one that’s been hotly debated this year — its effects on climate change. While renewables offer one workaround, PoS offers a far more attractive workaround — eliminating energy consumption dependency altogether.

Related: No, Musk, don’t blame Bitcoin for dirty energy — The problem lies deeper

Many environmental advocates invoke the analogy of coal-guzzling power plants to illustrate the dangers of PoW. Taking this analogy a step further, PoW can be considered as the engine that drove crypto through its “Industrial Revolution” phase. For the digital era, however, we need a more sustainable and resilient engine that can reach cruise speeds for long into the future without losing power or causing unknown collateral damage along the way.

PoS — a model for the future

None of this is a criticism of Bitcoin or PoW, both of which have proven their ability to last the distance. Bitcoin’s resilience means it will be around long into the future. However, new platforms and projects are self-evidently shunning PoW in favor of PoS. Therefore, it seems inevitable that many PoW platforms will simply fade out through lack of use over time.

Ultimately, for the blockchain sector, this is a good thing. Aside from the endless accusations of environmental destruction, a shift to PoS will ensure that the ecosystem is more resilient against external forces. Furthermore, by eliminating the need for expensive mining equipment, PoS makes joining a blockchain network as a validator more democratic and removes barriers to entry. Making staking more attractive improves the likelihood of validators joining the network, increasing security.

As the returns available in the traditional financial markets diminish over the coming years, and while governments seek to recoup the debts they incurred over the last year or two, staking will become an increasingly attractive prospect for investors. For those of us who’ve watched the inexorable rise of staking over the last year or two, the only question is: Does the JPMorgan prediction go far enough?

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Tushar Aggarwal, an early member of the LuneX Ventures, is the founder and CEO of Persistence, an ecosystem of bleeding-edge financial applications focusing on both institutional and crypto-native users. Tushar is listed in Forbes 30 under 30 Asia.

Publicly Listed Chinese Firm SOS Commits $50 Million to Bitcoin Investment Amid Market Surge

Ledger Live integrates ‘accessible’ Ether staking option

Ledger announce support for Ether staking using Lido Finance in an attempt to drive affordability and inclusion in the market.

In a recent blog post, popular cryptocurrency hardware wallet Ledger announced a new partnership with Ethereum 2.0 staking solution Lido Finance in a move that claims greater accessibility and liquidity for independent stakers in the market.

Staking is a niche method of investing within the cryptocurrency ecosystem which allows users to independently or collectively stake their crypto assets, collecting passive income in return, as well as actively contributing to the sustainability of the blockchain network.

Users attempting to stake their Ether (ETH) in the past have been met with daunting economic hurdles. The current cost to become an Eth2 network validator stands at around $100,000 – a figure which many investors in this market simply cannot afford.

Centralized ETH staking options are available on exchanges such as Coinbase or Kraken, but these carry a hefty entry fee and obvious trust concerns — not ideal for investors who maintain the core industry value of free asset autonomy.

In recent months, the Ledger interface has provided users the option of decentralized staking in the form of consensus mechanisms Polkadot or Tezos, but the real demand in the market lay with the smart-contract giant Ethereum.

Related: These 3 metrics suggest there’s still time for another ‘DeFi Summer’

By eliminating the high barrier-to-entry for staking ETH, this partnership has set precedent, allowing users to stake a nominal amount of ETH instead of the 32 ETH previously required.

As Ethereum embarks on a new frontier with Eth2, staking and indeed lending will draw in greater audience participation and offer lucrative opportunities for regular cryptocurrency participants.

In this example of Ledger and Lido; as the blog post explains: “For each Ether you’ll stake through LIDO you’ll receive stETH in exchange. These can be exchanged, sent, or sold using services such as Paraswap.”

stETH tokens — which equal ETH at a 1:1 ratio — will then become visible within your Ledger wallet. This asset figure will refresh on a daily basis to display newly accumulated staking rewards.

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Galaxy Digital backs $50M funding round for crypto staking outfit Figment

The crypto staking service platform is now worth over $500 million and could be looking to expand staff strength and business operations.

Mike Novogratz’s investment management firm Galaxy Digital has reportedly participated in a $50 million funding round for Figment, a crypto staking startup.

According to Bloomberg on Monday, Galaxy Digital joined investors like Anchorage and Bonfire Ventures in a Series B funding round led by Senator Investment Group and Liberty City Ventures.

The company is now reportedly worth about $500 million following the fresh injection of investment capital.

Commenting on the funding round, Lorien Gabel, CEO of Figment, said that the funding marks a “new chapter” for the firm.

The announcement also included a quote from Novogratz describing the yield generating potential of proof-of-stake (PoS) as an “important catalyst” in incentivizing greater institutional interest in digital assets.

PoS is an alternate consensus protocol to proof-of-work that replaces the computational requirements for transaction validation in the latter with a system based on the validator’s stake in the network.

Indeed, Figment reportedly stakes more than $7 billion worth of digital assets for over 100 institutional clients and is looking to upscale its workforce to further expand its business operations.

Related: JPMorgan report: Eth2 could kick-start $40B staking industry by 2025

Novogratz’s comments about PoS driving institutional adoption of digital assets are already playing out in the crypto space. Companies like European telecom giant Deutsche Telekom are involved in the cryptocurrency staking arena.

As previously reported by Cointelegraph, Deutsche Telekom recently tapped Coinbase Custody as the preferred custodian of its staked Celo (CELO) tokens. Indeed, the company is also a validator on the Celo network via its T-Systems MMS subsidiary.

Back in July, Swiss-licensed digital asset bank Sygnum became the first bank to offer Ethereum 2.0 staking services to institutional clients. Indeed, Ethereum’s transition to PoS has been tipped to have profound implications for the emerging “Staking as a Service” market.

Publicly Listed Chinese Firm SOS Commits $50 Million to Bitcoin Investment Amid Market Surge

Four Low-Cap Crypto Assets Spike More Than 100% Within One Week

Four altcoins, all of which individually boast a market capitalization of below $600 million, have recorded growth of over 100% in just seven days. At the top of the list is TrueFi (TRU), a decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol that supports uncollateralized lending. According to CoinGecko, TRU surged from a seven-day low of $0.14 to $0.75, […]

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Publicly Listed Chinese Firm SOS Commits $50 Million to Bitcoin Investment Amid Market Surge

Altcoin Roundup: Hodling Ethereum? Here’s how and where to stake your ETH

The options for earning passive income from staking ETH continue to expand. Here are a few.

The overall feel across the cryptocurrency landscape over the past week has been one of bubbling anticipation, with the Ethereum network finally undergoing its London hard fork, which includes reforms to the transaction fee market, thanks to EIP-1559.

London is the latest in a series of upgrades that are part of Ethereum’s measured transition from its original proof-of-work consensus model to a proof-of-stake model dubbed Ethereum 2.0.

On Eth2, tokenholders who hold at least 32 Ether (ETH) can operate a validator node and verify transactions on the network. With the current price of Ether trading near $2,700, that puts the entry cost of running an Eth2 validator node at $86,400 — a price too steep for most participants in the market.

To help combat this issue, several options — including staking pools and centralized exchange staking — have emerged to offer all Ether tokenholders the opportunity to earn a yield on their tokens.

Here’s a review of some of the top options currently available to Ether holders.

Lido

Another option available to Ether holders who wish to stake their tokens while also being able to access their equity is Lido, a liquid staking solution for Ethereum.

Liquid staking protocols allow users to earn staking rewards without locking assets or maintaining staking infrastructure.

Through the Lido platform, users can stake their Ether with no minimum deposit required, with a current APR of 5.4% after the staking rewards fee is deducted. In return for staked Ether, users receive stETH, which can be freely moved and traded at will.

Total value locked on the Lido protocol. Source: DeFi Llama

According to data from DeFi Llama, Lido is currently the top-ranked Ethereum staking pool and the eleventh-largest decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol by total value locked, with $3.26 billion in value currently locked in the Lido protocol.

The liquid staking capabilities of Lido are currently in the process of expanding, thanks to an initiative in the Anchor protocol community to list bETH — a wrapped form of stETH on the Terra blockchain — as a form of collateral on the Anchor platform, which will allow Anchor users to borrow TerraUSD (UST) against their staked Ether collateral as well as earn liquidity mining rewards.

StakeWise

StakeWise is an Eth2 staking service whose goal is to help users achieve the highest yield possible on their holdings through the combination of staking, yield farming, low fees and a unique tokenomic structure that enables compound staking.

Interested parties can deposit Ether into the StakeWise smart contract and, in return, receive sETH2, which is “staking ETH.” Rewards for the staked assets are paid out in rETH2, which is “reward ETH,” and both sETH2 and rETH2 can be exchanged at a one-to-one ratio for Ether.

These assets can also be transferred to any Ethereum wallet or exchanged for other tokens, allowing tokenholders to access the equity held in their staked Ether while also being able to earn staking rewards.

The StakeWise protocol enables anyone holding at least 0.001 ETH to participate in staking via StakeWise Pool, while larger tokenholders with at least 32 ETH can use StakeWise Solo, a noncustodial staking service where users provide the public part of their withdrawal key and blocks of 32 ETH for StakeWise to create and manage validators on their behalf.

The current APR offered for staking on the StakeWise protocol is 5.64%. There is a 10% commission for rewards generated through StakeWise Pool, while StakeWise Solo users are charged a fee of 10 Dai per validator per month.

Related: Boomer brand changes NYSE ticker from ‘ETH,’ acknowledging crypto’s ascendancy

Centralized exchanges

For users who are not quite up to speed on the ins and outs of decentralized finance — or simply prefer the more traditional custodial route — some of the top centralized exchanges in the ecosystem have started offering Eth2 staking services to traders on their platforms.

The leading options currently available to users in the United States are Coinbase and Kraken, the number-two and number-four globally ranked cryptocurrency exchanges, respectively, according to 24-hour trading volume.

The main drawback for users who wish to stake their Ether using one of these options is that their stakes will be illiquid, meaning that they will be unable to trade their tokens or access the value contained within until the Eth2 network is fully launched.

Kraken currently offers an annual staking reward of 5% to 7%, depending on the rules of the Ethereum protocol, and charges a 15% administrative fee on all rewards received.

The current APR offered by Coinbase is 5%, after a 25% commission is deducted. While neither Kraken nor Coinbase offers any kind of insurance on staked Ether, Coinbase has promised to cover any losses that occur should its validator responsibilities not be met.

Overall, the top staking options available to Ether holders offer an APR range of 5% to 7% and charge a minimum commission fee of between 10% and 25%. When compared with the sub-1% savings rate offered by most banks on a rapidly inflating dollar supply that loses more value by the day, Ether staking could soon become the preferred savings account and a source of passive income for cryptocurrency proponents.

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The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Publicly Listed Chinese Firm SOS Commits $50 Million to Bitcoin Investment Amid Market Surge