BlackRock’s iShares Staked Ethereum Trust (ETHB) crossed $254 million in assets under management within its first week of trading on Nasdaq, marking one of the strongest crypto ETF debuts since the spot Bitcoin ETF wave began in January 2024.
ETHB launched on March 12, 2026, with approximately $100 million to $107 million in seed capital from BlackRock Financial Management, an affiliate of iShares. By March 21, the fund had attracted an estimated $146 million to $154 million in fresh investor inflows on top of that initial seed, pushing total AUM to $254 million.
First-day trading volume reached approximately $15.5 million. Bloomberg Intelligence ETF analyst James Seyffart described the opening as “a pretty good start for any ETF.”
What sets ETHB apart from BlackRock’s existing spot Ethereum fund (ETHA) is its built-in staking mechanism. The trust stakes between 70% and 95% of its ETH holdings through three validators: Figment, Galaxy Blockchain Infrastructure, and Attestant. Roughly 80% of the fund’s ETH was already staked on-chain by launch day.
Of the staking rewards generated, 82% are distributed to investors through monthly dividend payments. The remaining 18% covers fees for trust institutions, custodians, and staking service providers. The sponsor fee is set at 0.25%, discounted to 0.12% for the first year on up to $2.5 billion in assets.
The $254 million figure needs context. When spot Bitcoin ETFs launched in January 2024, the combined first-week net inflows across all issuers reached approximately $1.5 billion. BlackRock’s own iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) was the dominant contributor to that total.
The original spot Ethereum ETFs, which debuted in July 2024, saw roughly $266 million flow in across all issuers within the first 24 hours, but net flows were muted by significant outflows from the Grayscale Ethereum Trust (ETHE) conversion. The broader Ethereum ETF market has experienced choppy flows in recent months, making ETHB’s clean $254 million debut noteworthy.
The critical distinction is that ETHB is not a plain spot ETF. It represents a new product category: a yield-generating crypto fund that pays monthly income. This makes direct comparisons to earlier spot-only launches imperfect, but also signals that BlackRock sees demand for a differentiated product beyond simple price exposure.
Unlike Grayscale’s funds, which retrofitted staking into existing products, ETHB launched with staking built into its structure from day one. BlackRock US Head of Equity ETFs Jay Jacobs has noted that investors who already hold ETHA for pure price exposure now have a yield-generating alternative from the same issuer.
The timing of ETHB’s launch is striking. The broader crypto market sits in “Extreme Fear” territory, with the Fear and Greed Index at 12. ETH itself is trading at $2,157, down roughly 56% from its all-time high of $4,946 set in August 2025.
Yet institutional capital flowed in anyway. The $146 million to $154 million in fresh inflows, separate from BlackRock’s own seed money, suggests that large allocators view the current price environment as an entry point rather than a warning signal.
Staking ETFs introduce a supply-side dynamic that plain spot funds do not. When ETHB stakes 70% to 95% of its ETH holdings, that capital is locked in validators and removed from liquid circulation. If staking ETFs attract sustained inflows, they could meaningfully tighten the available ETH supply on exchanges over time.
ETHB did not launch in isolation. The SEC’s approval of staked Ethereum ETF structures in early 2026 also enabled competing products from Grayscale and REX-Osprey. This regulatory green light for yield-bearing crypto fund structures has opened the door for additional filings from other major asset managers.
The growing roster of crypto ETF products across multiple assets now gives institutional investors a menu of regulated exposure options. ETHB’s early traction suggests that yield, not just price exposure, is becoming a primary driver of institutional crypto demand.
Concrete catalysts ahead include any new staking ETF filings from competitors like Fidelity or Invesco, scheduled Ethereum network upgrades, and whether ETHB’s monthly dividend payments attract a new demographic of income-focused investors, from dividend-oriented allocators to retirement accounts, that previously had no regulated on-ramp to crypto yield.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.


