Ether earns yield as BlackRock ETHB stakes 70–95%

Key Takeaway:

  • BlackRock launches ETHB, a staked Ethereum ETF adding yield to exposure.
  • Targets 70–95% staked, maintaining liquid buffer for redemptions and liquidity.
  • Offers regulated staking access, but fees and slashing risks reduce net yield.
ETHB staking mechanics: Why rewards, fees, and risks shape returns

BlackRock has launched a staked ethereum ETF, ETHB, designed to add staking yield to standard ETH price exposure. The product aims to make ethereum staking accessible within a regulated fund wrapper.

The fund expects to stake a large majority of its ETH while keeping a smaller portion unstaked for redemptions. According to Levex, the target range is 70–95% staked under normal conditions, with the rest held liquid.

Income-seeking demand is a key part of the appeal. As reported by AInvest, institutions have been looking for yield in digital assets, and a staked ETH ETF offers that within a familiar exchange-traded format.

There are trade-offs that investors should weigh. According to Cointelegraph, net yield will be lower than raw staking rates due to fees, a liquidity buffer, and operational risks such as slashing.

Ethereum’s governance profile could also be affected over time. As reported by Benzinga, Vitalik Buterin has warned that large institutional holders might tilt incentives toward centralized priorities.

ETHB seeks to earn protocol rewards by staking most of its ETH through professional validators, while an unstaked buffer aims to support daily liquidity. Staking rewards accrue in-kind (ETH), then flow through the fund’s fee structure. This design combines yield generation with ETF convenience but introduces tracking differences versus spot ETH.

Based on data from CoinMarketCap Academy, investors receive 82% of staking rewards, with the remaining 18% split between BlackRock and Coinbase for service and validator costs. The sponsor fee is 0.12% in year one on the first $2.5 billion of assets, rising to 0.25% thereafter. After these deductions and depending on network conditions, investor yields are estimated around roughly 2.8% to about 3–4%.

A liquidity reserve means not all ETH is staked at all times, which naturally lowers gross yield but supports redemptions. Validator performance, downtime, or slashing could reduce returns, and custody or operational issues could affect tracking. These factors make realized yields variable rather than fixed.

Framing the strategic shift, the product’s backers have emphasized how staking changes the ETF value proposition relative to earlier ETH funds that lacked yield. “Staking could be a huge step change for ether ETFs,” said Robbie Mitchnick, Head of Digital Assets at BlackRock.

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