The Ethereum Foundation has begun staking roughly 70,000 ETH from its treasury, directing rewards back into its operations. The move aligns with its treasury policy and leverages open-source infrastructure to enhance resilience and decentralization.
The Ethereum Foundation (EF) has started staking a portion of its treasury, aiming to deploy approximately 70,000 ETH into validators as part of a strategy outlined in its treasury policy last year.
An initial deposit of 2,016 ETH is already live, with staking rewards flowing back into the foundation’s treasury. The goal is straightforward: generate ETH-denominated yield while helping secure the network.
For infrastructure, the EF selected open-source tools developed by Attestant. The setup relies on Dirk, a distributed signer that spreads validation responsibilities across multiple jurisdictions to avoid a single point of failure. It also uses Vouch, which enables multiple Beacon and Execution client pairings to reduce client diversity risk.
The foundation’s validator configuration includes minority clients and a hybrid mix of hosted and self-managed hardware across several regions. Validators are using Type 2 (0x02) withdrawal credentials, allowing balances to be consolidated and transferred more flexibly.
With a maximum effective balance of 2,048 ETH per validator, the structure reduces the number of signing keys to roughly 35. Exits can be triggered by the withdrawal address even if validators go offline.
By staking directly, the foundation participates in Ethereum’s consensus system like other validators. The yield will help fund protocol research and development, ecosystem grants, and community initiatives. The foundation’s move positions it not just as a coordinator, but as an active participant in the network’s security.
The credentials allow validator balances to be consolidated, transferred, and exited more flexibly, improving operational efficiency and key management.
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