BlackRock’s ETHB staking ETF routes 70–95% of its Ethereum into validators run by Figment and others.
- ETHB is BlackRock’s first Ethereum ETF that adds staking rewards on top of spot exposure, with roughly 70–95% of ETH staked at any given time.
- Figment runs part of the validator infrastructure for ETHB alongside Galaxy Digital and Attestant, handling block proposals, attestations, and network security duties for the fund’s staked ETH.
- The ETF launched with about $100–107m in assets, did roughly $15.5m in first-day volume, and passes around 82% of gross staking rewards to shareholders, with a 0.25% fee cut to 0.12% on the first $2.5b for a year.
BlackRock’s new iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF (ETHB) is pulling institutional staking into the ETF wrapper — and delegating a crucial piece of that infrastructure to Figment. The fund, listed on Nasdaq under the ticker ETHB, is BlackRock’s first crypto product that offers staking rewards on top of spot exposure, staking between roughly 70% and 95% of its ether holdings through professional validator operators. Figment has been named one of the key node operators for ETHB, responsible for running Ethereum validation infrastructure, processing transactions, and helping secure the network on behalf of the trust.
ETHB quietly marks a structural shift in how traditional finance can access Ethereum’s (ETH) proof‑of‑stake economy. At launch, the ETF came to market with around $100–107 million in initial assets and generated about $15.5 million in trading volume on its first day, according to multiple data providers. Under normal conditions, the fund stakes most of that ether, returning roughly 82% of gross staking rewards to shareholders, with the current implied annualized yield around 3.1%, while BlackRock and its partners retain the remainder as fees. Management fees are set at 0.25%, temporarily reduced to 0.12% on the first $2.5 billion in assets for the first year, a pricing structure designed to pull flows away from un‑staked spot products.
Figment’s role is central to that pitch. As one of Ethereum’s largest institutional staking providers, the company operates validators that handle block proposals and attestations for ETHB’s staked share of ether, alongside other providers such as Galaxy Digital and Attestant. By outsourcing validation to specialist firms instead of building its own infrastructure, BlackRock can offer regulated clients exposure to staking yields while keeping operational risk and technical complexity at arm’s length. That model also gives Ethereum another anchor tenant in its validator set, deepening the pool of professionally run nodes that secure the network.
For Ethereum itself, the timing is favorable. ETH is trading around $2,201, up roughly 6.8% in the last 24 hours, with a 24‑hour low near $2,041.70 and high just above $2,200, on nearly $27.76 billion in volume. Staked ether has already hit record highs on‑chain, and the arrival of a yield‑bearing BlackRock ETF that locks up a large portion of its holdings reinforces that supply sink while giving institutions a familiar wrapper for participating in Ethereum’s security budget. For live data, readers can follow crypto.news’ dedicated Ethereum price page, and for more on ETF‑driven flows and Ethereum’s evolving role, see our recent coverage of Bitcoin ETF inflows after Iran tensions, analysis of macro shocks and BTC price volatility, and Michael Saylor’s continued treasury‑driven Bitcoin accumulation.

