Analysts Claim Ethereum Loses Appeal as Staking Yields Fall Below ATOM, DOT, TIA, SOL

By Aaron Feuerstein October 30, 2024 In Ark, Ethereum, Staking
The staking text on notebook for currency or business concept 3d rendering
Source:AdobeStock
  • Ethereum’s staking yield is now lower than major Layer-1 protocols, with alternatives offering 7% to 21% returns.
  • The validator queue for ETH has shortened significantly, indicating decreased demand.
  • Traditional finance rates, such as 2-year Treasury yields, are surpassing ETH staking yields, leading to reduced collateral value.
  • Despite lower yields, Ark Invest views Ethereum as crucial in decentralised finance, similar to Bitcoin in significance.

According to a recent report by Kaiko, Ethereum may be losing its appeal as number two crypto asset. At least when it comes to staking rewards.

Related: VanEck Says New Bitcoin Buyers Entering Market Daily in ‘Very Bullish Setup’

According to the analysts, the yield users can expect for staking ETH has fallen below what they could get with other popular layer-1 protocols.

Currently, the ETH staking yield is lower than those offered by other major Layer 1 protocols such as Cosmos, Polkadot, Celestia, and Solana, where rewards range between 7% and 21%.

Kaiko

Validator Queue Shortens, Demand Drops

They also noted that the validator queue has shortened from “the peak of 45 days in June 2023”, now averaging less than a day, rarely going over four days in 2024.

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This decrease in demand might be due to various factors, such as reduced incentives, lower rewards, and increased competition from other blockchains.

It coincides with the plateau of the largest Ethereum staking participant, Lido’s staked ETH, stETH.

Total staked ETH over time vs stETH supply, source: Kaiko

Analysts at 10X Research add that just keeping your money in traditional assets such as bonds might attract more yield than staking ETH.

With TradFi interest rates (such as 2-year Treasury yields at 4.1%) significantly outpacing ETH staking yields at 2.9%, Ethereum holders face a slow bleed.

10X Research

Additionally, they wrote that reduced demand for ETH “drives down its collateral value in USD, Bitcoin, and other preferred benchmarks and diminishes overall appeal”.

The analysts believe if Donald Trump wins the US election next week, US Treasury yields might continue to outperform ETH, which therefore puts more pressure on the price of the second largest crypto.

Ethereum Still Special, Says Ark Invest

Though ETH staking yields may not be able to compete with such high returns it “remains the de facto benchmark in decentralized finance, playing a role analogous to the US federal funds rate in traditional finance”, Kaiko added.

Related: MicroStrategy Stock Reaches New Peak as Bitcoin Climbs to $69,000, Market Cap Nears $50 Billion

A recent report by Ark Invest positions Ethereum as parallel in importance and utility to Bitcoin, which is traditionally seen as the leading digital store of value.

By suggesting that Ethereum offers similar – and in some respects, superior – characteristics (such as yield generation and broad economic utility), Ark Invest challenges the prevailing market view that often prioritises Bitcoin as the primary digital asset worth institutional investment.

This belief in Ethereum’s broad and integrative use-case potential drives Ark’s bullish stance on its long-term value proposition.

Aaron Feuerstein
Author

Aaron Feuerstein

Aaron Feuerstein is a freelance writer based in Melbourne. His focus is on decentralised finance and the regulatory space surrounding blockchain. He holds a Master's in Accounting. When he is not studying the latest legal case, he enjoys his time as a modest but eager hobby cook.

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