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‘Successful’ ETH ETF less perfect without staking — BlackRock

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BlackRock’s head of digital assets, Robbie Mitchnick, described the firm’s Ether (ETH) exchange-traded fund (ETF) as a “tremendous success” but acknowledged a key limitation. Speaking on March 20 at the Digital Asset Summit, he noted that the ETF is “less perfect” without staking, highlighting a crucial feature absent from the current offering.

“A staking yield is a meaningful part of how you can generate investment return in this space,” Mitchnick said. “And all the [Ether] ETFs, of course, at launch did not have staking. So, if that is able to get resolved…”

However, adding staking to Ether ETFs is no simple task, according to Mitchnick. “It’s not as simple as a new administration just green-lighting something, and then boom, we’re all good, off to the races,” he said. “There’s a lot of fairly complex challenges that have to be figured out, but if that can get figured out, then I think it’s gonna be sort of a step change upward in terms of what we see the activity around those products is.”

Panel at Digital Asset Summit 2025 with Joseph Lubin (middle) and Robbie Mitchnick (right). Source: YouTube

ETH staking was first introduced in December 2020 as part of the Ethereum network’s move from a proof-of-work consensus mechanism to proof-of-stake. By February 2024, Ether staking deposits reached $85 billion, accounting for 25% of the circulating supply of the cryptocurrency.

The current yield rate for staked Ether is between 2% and 7% annually. However, staking ETH comes with risks, including the possibility of slashing if a validator engages in misconduct. This potential penalty could deter traditional investors, as it introduces an additional layer of risk to their investments.

Related: Ether ETFs poised to surge in 2025, analysts say

Joseph Lubin weighs in on Ethereum narratives

Narratives surrounding Ethereum have, at times, been negative during this bull run, especially because the price of Ether has lagged behind other crypto tokens.

Also speaking at the Digital Asset Summit, Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin said the narrative about Ethereum to institutional investors is “too big to describe.”

“It’s like trying to describe the internet protocols and the web protocols,” Lubin said, adding:

“It can do everything just the way you can do pretty much anything on the web. And so, there are people who can rock all of that, who can hold a lot of the complexity and the potentiality in mind, but most people are not gonna be able to do that.”

According to Lubin, the Ethereum narrative should target applications that matter to users and businesses rather than broad theoretical discussions. “We are at our broadband moment, and we will see applications like social graphs, decentralized ID, attestations, reputation, things that you can use inside of different applications.”

BlackRock’s ETH pitch to investors

Mitchnick noted that when talking to institutional investors, Ethereum is easier to describe at a second-grade level than a 10th-grade level.

Robbie Mitchnick at Digital Asset Summit 2025. Source: YouTube

“Second-grade level, it’s a technology innovation story,” Mitchnick said. “Once you start to get beyond that, it does get a little more vast, a little more complicated. It’s about being a bet on blockchain adoption and innovation. That’s part of the thesis as we communicate it to clients. And then when they wanna get down to a little more tangible level, we can talk about some of the more specific use cases that it unlocks.”

BlackRock has advertised Ethereum to investors as a bet on tokenization, stablecoin adoption and decentralized finance, according to Mitchnick.

Data from SoSoValue shows ETH ETFs hold a total value of $7 billion as of March 20, with a cumulative inflow of $2.5 billion. However, the ETFs have seen a cumulative outflow of $358 million in the past 11 days as the cryptocurrency market has largely struggled.

Magazine: Ethereum L2s will be interoperable ‘within months’ — Complete guide

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GoMining launches $100M Bitcoin mining fund for institutional investors

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GoMining, a platform that allows users to mine Bitcoin (BTC) through data centers, is launching a $100 million Bitcoin mining fund for institutional investors. Custodied by Bitgo, the fund promises annual distributions from mining yield and a strategy that focuses on Bitcoin rewards and reinvestment.

GoMining’s Alpha Blocks Fund comes as more companies have added Bitcoin to their balance sheets, capturing enthusiasm surrounding the resurgence of the world’s top cryptocurrency by market capitalization. Companies that have done so, including Japan’s Metaplanet and medical technology company Semler Scientific, have seen their stock prices increase.

“Unlike passive equity investments, the Alpha Blocks Fund offers direct exposure to mined Bitcoin via a fully managed, compounding hashrate strategy,” a GoMining spokesperson told Cointelegraph.

“BTC rewards are reinvested to increase the fund’s hashrate and improve miner efficiency — creating real, yield-driven outcomes. Our model is built for performance, not market sentiment, and integrates utility-based advantages that listed mining companies typically don’t offer.”

According to a press release shared with Cointelegraph, GoMining Institutional operates with 7.3 Exahash of active hash power.

Related: Is cryptocurrency mining still profitable in 2025?

“This framework ensures compliance with relevant regulatory requirements and supports our focus on delivering institutional-grade exposure to Bitcoin mining yield strategies,” said the spokesperson, adding that retail users can access a separate digital mining product.

The fund will charge a 2% flat annual management fee, with no performance fees applied.

While GoMining’s Bitcoin fund caters to institutional investors, its flagship product is geared toward retail miners who may lack the funds to create a heavy-duty mining rig. In 2024, it revealed an attempt to gamify Bitcoin mining through the use of non-fungible tokens.

Institutional investment in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies like Ether (ETH) has been on the rise since 2024, when the first cryptocurrency exchange-traded funds were launched in the United States.

Regulatory clarity from Europe’s MiCA and the enthusiasm for digital assets in the United States might be changing institutional investors’ skepticism about cryptocurrencies. In March 2025, a report by Coinbase revealed that 83% of institutions are planning a crypto allocation.

Magazine: AI may already use more power than Bitcoin — and it threatens Bitcoin mining

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Ethereum prints 4 consecutive red monthly candles, but data points to an ETH/BTC bottom

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Ethereum’s native token, Ether (ETH), registered four consecutive red monthly candles after the altcoin dropped 18.47% in March. The altcoin’s current market structure reflects a sustained bearish trend not seen since the bear market of 2022.

With each monthly close taking place below the previous month’s low, analysts are beginning the debate about whether ETH is approaching a bottom or if there is more downside ahead for the altcoin.

Ethereum/Bitcoin ratio hits new 5-year low

On March 30, the Ethereum/Bitcoin ratio dropped to a five-year low of 0.021. The ETH/BTC ratio measures ETH’s value against Bitcoin (BTC), and the current decline underlines Ether’s underperformance against Bitcoin over the past five years.

In fact, the last time the ETH/BTC ratio dipped to 0.021, ETH was valued between $150-$300 in May 2020.

Ethereum/Bitcoin 1-month chart. Source: Cointelegraph/TradingView

Data from the token terminal showed Ethereum’s monthly fees dropped to $22 million in March 20205, its lowest level since June 2020, indicating low network activity and market interest.

Ethereum fees represent the cost users pay for transactions, which is influenced by network demand. When network fees begin to drop, it indicates reduced network utility.

Ethereum fees and price. Source: token terminal

Despite the price action and revenue malaise, Ethereum analyst VentureFounder said that the ETH/BTC bottom could occur over the next few weeks. The analyst hinted at a potential bottom between 0.017 and 0.022, suggesting that the ratio might drop further before a recovery. The analyst said,

“Maybe another lower low RSI and one more push downward lots of similarity with 2018-2019 Fed tightening & QE cycle, expecting the first higher high after May FOMC when Fed ends QT & begin QE.”

Ethereum/Bitcoin analysis by venture founder. Source: X.com

Related: Ethereum price down almost 50% since Eric Trump’s ‘add ETH’ endorsement

Historical odds favor a short-term bottom

Since its inception, ETH has registered three or more consecutive bearish monthly candles on five occasions, and each time, a short-term bottom was the result. The chart below shows that the most back-to-back red months occurred in 2018, with seven, but prices jumped 83% after the correction.

Ethereum monthly chart. Source: Cointelegraph/TradingView

In 2022, after three consecutive bearish months, ETH price consolidated in a range for almost a year, but the bottom was in on the third bearish candle in June 2022. Historically, Ethereum has a 75% probability of having a green month in April.

Based on Ethereum’s past quarterly returns, the altcoin experienced the least number of drawdowns in Q2 compared to other quarters. With the average returns in Q2 as high as 60.59%, the likelihood of positive returns in April.

Ethereum Quarterly returns. Source: CoinGlass

Related: Why is Ethereum (ETH) price up today?

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.

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US lawmaker will reintroduce crypto retirement bill to help Trump agenda

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For the second time, Alabama Senator Tommy Tuberville is set to reintroduce a bill aimed at allowing Americans to add cryptocurrency to their retirement savings plans.

In a March 31 Fox News interview, Sen. Tuberville said he planned to reintroduce his “Financial Freedoms Act” legislation after two failed attempts to get the legislation through Congress in 2022 and 2023. In announcing the bill, the Alabama senator said he wanted to help US President Donald Trump’s perceived role as a “crypto president.” 

“Give people a chance to breathe for once […] let them do what they do best [which] is invest their money,” said the senator. 

The Financial Freedom Act, which Tuberville first introduced in the US Senate in May 2022, proposed scaling back regulations with the Department of Labor over the types of investments used in 401(k) retirement plan fiduciaries. The senator said he would reintroduce the bill on April 1, but congressional records showed no movement at the time of publication.

Related: Trump-linked crypto ventures may complicate US stablecoin policy

This is a developing story, and further information will be added as it becomes available.

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