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Ethereum’s staking exit queue has no wait time, while the entrance line is over 25 days

The imbalance is one sign of confidence among ethereum holders as ETFs and treasury firms incorporate staking.

Sage D. Young

The line to exit as a validator for ethereum is now empty, a steep collapse from its all-time high of more than 46 days in September. 

Simultaneously, the entrance queue for staking has been growing, with the waiting period jumping from under eight days in December to over 25 days on Wednesday, with 1,460,911 ethereum tokens currently waiting to be staked. 

(Staking, the key security mechanism for the ethereum network, refers to the process of locking up tokens to aid in the blockchain’s consensus mechanism in exchange for rewards.)

Why the imbalance? Julio Moreno, head of research at crypto analytics firm CryptoQuant, said to Sherwood News, “Higher staking or staking inflows are seen as holders having expectations of higher prices ahead.” 

Sean Dawson, head of research at crypto options platform Derive.xyz, said the disparity for traders is “a decent mid-term signal as rising entry queues represents increased confidence in ETH yields and conviction by said holders. Further, falling exit queues means deleveraging by exiting parties is likely completed so generally bullish.” 

The exit queue spiking to record levels last year occurred in large part because staking platform Kiln, which operates 5% of the ethereum network, initiated a precautionary exit of all its validators. 

Anthony Bertolino, vice president of ecosystem at distributed validator project Obol, told Sherwood, “This ‘forced rotation’ created a historic backlog as billions of dollars in institutional stake had to exit and shuffle to new setups, temporarily clogging the exit ramp.”

New players changing the market 

The staking market is undergoing change, with traditional finance and treasury firms contributing a new layer of demand. According to Kam Benbrik, head of research at staking provider Chorus One, these institutions, including asset managers and hedge funds, are seeking direct exposure and access to ethereum’s base yield through staking. 

BitMine Immersion Technologies, the largest ethereum treasury firm, started staking a portion of its stockpile in December.

ETF providers are also accelerating this trend by integrating staking into their products, such as digital asset manager Grayscale, which recently announced it distributed staking rewards to shareholders. 

“As long as the entry queue remains congested and exits stay low, it signals that these institutions are building positions for the medium to long term. This provides an optimistic outlook for ETH because it reflects capital locked away from the circulating supply,” Benbrik said.

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The price swing, which helped boost the total crypto market capitalization by 4.8% in the period, has resulted in $474.7 million in short positions liquidated worldwide, data from CoinGlass shows.

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(Robinhood Markets Inc. is the parent company of Sherwood Media, an independently operated media company subject to certain legal and regulatory restrictions.)

$11.4B

The FBI revealed in a Monday press release that Americans submitted 181,565 complaints of schemes involving cryptocurrency and reported losses totaling around $11.4 billion last year, a 22% increase from 2024.

The age range most affected were people older than 60. Those in this category had the highest crypto complaint count at 44,555 with losses at $4.4 billion, per the annual report from the Internet Crime Complaint Center, a division of the FBI tasked with gathering intelligence on cybercrime.

One cybercrime the report pointed to was cryptocurrency investment fraud, which are sophisticated long-term scams using psychological manipulation, an appearance of legitimacy, and exploitation of cryptocurrencies to deceive victims into investing large sums of money. 

“These scams are largely perpetrated by organized criminal enterprises based in Southeast Asia using victims of human trafficking as forced labor to run the scam operations,” per the report. 

The FBI report comes as the crypto ecosystem is still reeling from a recent $270 million exploit that was planned six months in the making, a change from the initial estimate of multiple weeks.

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