Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Ethereum this week
Price pressure, institutional staking, and the EEZ move against sharding
Ethereum ended the first quarter of 2026 with a weak performance, while two critical developments aimed at solving the network's structural problems took place in the background: the Ethereum Foundation's record staking move and the "Ethereum Economic Zone" (EEZ) initiative. While price-activity divergence continues, institutional actors are locking capital into network security; developers are aiming to overcome Layer2 sharding with synchronous interaction in a single transaction.
Quarterly overview: activity peaked, price bottomed out
According to CryptoRank data, ETH closed the first quarter of 2026 with a 32.9% drop; it recorded a limited recovery of 1.3% in March. During the quarter, the price peaked at $3,385 and bottomed out at $1,760.
The triggers for the decline were multifaceted: In February, a sharp sell-off in the AI sector pressured ETH with the perception of it as a "tech stock-like" asset; Over $5.4 billion in leveraged long positions were liquidated, causing the price to fall from around $3,000 to $1,473. Simultaneously, the shift in transaction volume to Layer 2 reduced the amount of oil burned on the mainnet, pushing ETH back into inflationary territory. Globally, the Iran-Hormuz oil tension increased stagflation concerns, leading capital to flow into commodities like gold and oil. Ironically, despite on-chain activity reaching an all-time high, Ethereum's price performance remained weak.
Ethereum Foundation Strategy Change: Staking 22,517 ETH
On March 30, 2026, the Ethereum Foundation completed its largest single staking transaction in history, depositing 22,517 ETH (approximately $46.25 million) into a Beacon Deposit Contract. The transfer, detected by Arkham Intelligence at 1:38 ET, symbolizes a shift in the foundation's treasury strategy from a sell-to-yield model.
This move is part of a plan announced in February that envisages staking approximately 70,000 ETH in total. The foundation still holds 147,471 ETH (approximately $302 million). While previous periodic ETH sales created short-term market pressure and drew criticism, the new approach strengthens network security by “locking the circulating supply” and redirects staking returns to protocol research, ecosystem development, and community grants.
Following the transaction, the ETH price rose above $2,057, gaining over 2.5% in 24 hours. Although the foundation's share of total staking is limited to 0.07%, the capital commitment of a non-commercial actor is being read by the market as a “leadership signal.”
EEZ: A Synchronous Solution to Layer2 Sharding
The second major step supported by the Ethereum Foundation is the Ethereum Economic Zone (EEZ) framework proposed by Gnosis and Zisk developers. EEZ aims to allow smart contracts in different rollups to run synchronously within a single transaction without using bridges.
Gnosis co-founder Friederike Ernst summarized the core of the problem by saying, “Ethereum has a fragility problem, not a scaling problem. Every new L2 is a silo that makes it difficult for value to flow into the mainnet.” According to L2BEAT data, more than 20 active Layer 2 networks lock approximately $40 billion in value in total; however, liquidity is distributed among networks such as Arbitrum, Base, and Optimism.
EEZ will allow applications to share infrastructure among rollups and resettle back on Ethereum; fees will continue to be paid in ETH, and no new tokens will be issued. The EEZ Alliance has been established to coordinate standards within the initiative. Technical details and performance benchmarks are expected to be released in the coming weeks.
The debate was ignited by Vitalik Buterin's statement, “The original vision of L2s is no longer meaningful, we need a new path.” Optimism co-founder Karl Floersch argues that L2s need to go beyond scaling, while Arbitrum developer Steven Goldfeder from Offchain Labs points out that rollups still carry more transaction volume than the mainnet.
What does this mean?
While Ethereum may face short-term price pressure, the Foundation's staking move is providing indirect support on the supply side; EEZ, in the long term, promises to reduce liquidity fragmentation and simplify the developer experience. Record-breaking network activity essentially shows that usage remains alive; while institutional staking and interoperability initiatives signal the ecosystem's evolution from "speculation" to "infrastructure."
$ETH
#MarketsRepriceFedRateHikes
#CreatorLeaderboard
#ETH
Price pressure, institutional staking, and the EEZ move against sharding
Ethereum ended the first quarter of 2026 with a weak performance, while two critical developments aimed at solving the network's structural problems took place in the background: the Ethereum Foundation's record staking move and the "Ethereum Economic Zone" (EEZ) initiative. While price-activity divergence continues, institutional actors are locking capital into network security; developers are aiming to overcome Layer2 sharding with synchronous interaction in a single transaction.
Quarterly overview: activity peaked, price bottomed out
According to CryptoRank data, ETH closed the first quarter of 2026 with a 32.9% drop; it recorded a limited recovery of 1.3% in March. During the quarter, the price peaked at $3,385 and bottomed out at $1,760.
The triggers for the decline were multifaceted: In February, a sharp sell-off in the AI sector pressured ETH with the perception of it as a "tech stock-like" asset; Over $5.4 billion in leveraged long positions were liquidated, causing the price to fall from around $3,000 to $1,473. Simultaneously, the shift in transaction volume to Layer 2 reduced the amount of oil burned on the mainnet, pushing ETH back into inflationary territory. Globally, the Iran-Hormuz oil tension increased stagflation concerns, leading capital to flow into commodities like gold and oil. Ironically, despite on-chain activity reaching an all-time high, Ethereum's price performance remained weak.
Ethereum Foundation Strategy Change: Staking 22,517 ETH
On March 30, 2026, the Ethereum Foundation completed its largest single staking transaction in history, depositing 22,517 ETH (approximately $46.25 million) into a Beacon Deposit Contract. The transfer, detected by Arkham Intelligence at 1:38 ET, symbolizes a shift in the foundation's treasury strategy from a sell-to-yield model.
This move is part of a plan announced in February that envisages staking approximately 70,000 ETH in total. The foundation still holds 147,471 ETH (approximately $302 million). While previous periodic ETH sales created short-term market pressure and drew criticism, the new approach strengthens network security by “locking the circulating supply” and redirects staking returns to protocol research, ecosystem development, and community grants.
Following the transaction, the ETH price rose above $2,057, gaining over 2.5% in 24 hours. Although the foundation's share of total staking is limited to 0.07%, the capital commitment of a non-commercial actor is being read by the market as a “leadership signal.”
EEZ: A Synchronous Solution to Layer2 Sharding
The second major step supported by the Ethereum Foundation is the Ethereum Economic Zone (EEZ) framework proposed by Gnosis and Zisk developers. EEZ aims to allow smart contracts in different rollups to run synchronously within a single transaction without using bridges.
Gnosis co-founder Friederike Ernst summarized the core of the problem by saying, “Ethereum has a fragility problem, not a scaling problem. Every new L2 is a silo that makes it difficult for value to flow into the mainnet.” According to L2BEAT data, more than 20 active Layer 2 networks lock approximately $40 billion in value in total; however, liquidity is distributed among networks such as Arbitrum, Base, and Optimism.
EEZ will allow applications to share infrastructure among rollups and resettle back on Ethereum; fees will continue to be paid in ETH, and no new tokens will be issued. The EEZ Alliance has been established to coordinate standards within the initiative. Technical details and performance benchmarks are expected to be released in the coming weeks.
The debate was ignited by Vitalik Buterin's statement, “The original vision of L2s is no longer meaningful, we need a new path.” Optimism co-founder Karl Floersch argues that L2s need to go beyond scaling, while Arbitrum developer Steven Goldfeder from Offchain Labs points out that rollups still carry more transaction volume than the mainnet.
What does this mean?
While Ethereum may face short-term price pressure, the Foundation's staking move is providing indirect support on the supply side; EEZ, in the long term, promises to reduce liquidity fragmentation and simplify the developer experience. Record-breaking network activity essentially shows that usage remains alive; while institutional staking and interoperability initiatives signal the ecosystem's evolution from "speculation" to "infrastructure."
$ETH
#MarketsRepriceFedRateHikes
#CreatorLeaderboard
#ETH