Key Highlights
- BlackRock’s iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF (ETHB) began trading on Nasdaq on March 12, 2026, combining price exposure with on-chain yield.
- The fund will stake 70–95% of its ETH holdings via Coinbase, distributing 82% of gross staking rewards to shareholders while BlackRock and Coinbase retain 18% as a staking fee.
- The launch follows a fundamental shift in SEC posture under Chair Paul Atkins, who reversed the prior administration’s stance.
BlackRock’s iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF, trading under the ticker ETHB, began trading on Nasdaq on Thursday—the asset manager’s first crypto fund to incorporate staking and its third crypto ETF overall, expanding a lineup that already includes the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) and the iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA).
Unlike ETHA, which solely tracks Ether’s spot price, ETHB is structured as a total-return product. It holds spot ETH, stakes a significant portion of those holdings on the Ethereum network, and passes the resulting yield through to investors—minus fees.
BlackRock oversees roughly $130 billion across crypto-related exchange-traded products, tokenized liquidity funds, and stablecoin reserve management. The firm captured about 95% of flows into digital asset ETPs in 2025. That scale gives ETHB a structural advantage that no competitor can easily replicate on launch day.
BlackRock’s existing spot Ethereum ETF, ETHA, holds around $12 billion in assets—representing roughly 55% of the entire Ethereum ETF market. Its Bitcoin ETF, IBIT, remains the largest crypto ETF globally, with around $55 billion in assets under management.
The Fee and Reward Architecture
The fund’s financial mechanics deserve careful attention. BlackRock stakes 70–95% of the fund’s ETH through Coinbase as the prime execution agent. Of the gross staking rewards generated, 18% goes to BlackRock and Coinbase as a joint “Staking Fee,” while the remaining 82% flows directly to shareholders.
On top of that, BlackRock charges a 0.25% annual sponsor fee, temporarily reduced to 0.12% for the first $2.5 billion in assets during year one. In practical terms, if the fund holds $2.5 billion in ETH at a 3% staking yield, gross rewards would total $75 million—of which approximately $61.5 million flows to investors before the sponsor fee.
To ensure the fund can meet daily redemption demand without waiting on Ethereum’s unbonding periods, the trust maintains a liquidity buffer of 5–30% of its ETH holdings unstaked at any given time. This “liquidity sleeve” is the structural engineering that makes a staking product compatible with the daily creation-redemption mechanics of an ETF wrapper.
The Regulatory Pivot That Made This Possible
ETHB’s launch today would not have been possible two years ago. When BlackRock and peers launched the first wave of spot Ethereum ETFs in July 2024, then-SEC Chair Gary Gensler reportedly instructed firms to strip staking components from their filings, arguing that staking services offered by platforms like Kraken and Coinbase could constitute unregistered securities offerings.
The departure of Gensler and the appointment of Paul Atkins as SEC Chair signalled a fundamental transformation in U.S. financial regulation—moving away from the “regulation by enforcement” approach toward a disclosure-based framework that no longer obstructs legitimate staking products.
The Atkins-led SEC has also worked alongside Congress to support the passage of the GENIUS Act and the CLARITY Act, which established a federal framework for stablecoins and drew clear jurisdictional lines between the SEC and the CFTC — clearing the regulatory runway for products like ETHB.
ETHB Reshapes the Competitive Landscape
BlackRock is not the first to market with a staked Ethereum product, but it enters as the unambiguous heavyweight. Grayscale’s ETHE and Ethereum Mini Trust ETFs launched before ETHB but have attracted less than $5 billion in combined assets—compared to ETHA’s $11 billion as a non-staking product alone. The REX-Osprey ETH + Staking ETF also preceded BlackRock’s entry.
“As the world’s second-largest digital asset, Ethereum plays a central role in the long-term growth of blockchain adoption and the expansion of decentralized applications, including tokenization and stablecoin use cases,” said Robert Mitchnick, Global Head of Digital Assets at BlackRock.
The competitive dynamic may shift significantly now. There are currently 26 Ethereum ETF products from more than 20 competitors in the market. About 10 have more than $100 million in assets, and five have surpassed $1 billion.
For the millions of investors who have already bought exposure to Ethereum through ETHA or its competitors, ETHB represents an upgrade in one direction: if you hold ETH and believe in the network’s long-term trajectory, why not earn yield while you wait? BlackRock’s answer, as of today, is that you can—and now you don’t need a wallet to do it.
