An unprecedented phenomenon has emerged—the validator withdrawal queue has completely disappeared, while over 2.6 million ETH are waiting in line to be staked. Newcomers wanting to participate must wait at least 45 days before they can get on board. What does this shift mean? In simple terms, selling pressure is diminishing, while buying interest continues to accumulate.
The data is even more intuitive: nearly half of the total supply has been locked in staking contracts, turning into interest-bearing assets. Major institutional players (some have already staked up to 1.25 million ETH) are signaling their confidence with real capital—they view Ethereum as a new type of asset to allocate, with an annualized yield of around 2.8%.
The core logic isn't complicated: liquidity is being continuously drained. The circulating supply of ETH in the market is tightening, while the funds seeking to enter and earn yields are constantly increasing. This creates an increasingly tense supply and demand relationship. What truly drives the bull market isn't slogans, but this quiet and steadfast collective choice happening on-chain.
Don't just focus on the current price; that 45-day waiting queue is the real story.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
7 Likes
Reward
7
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ETH_Maxi_Taxi
· 6h ago
A 45-day team is not the issue; it's a signal that institutions are speaking with their actions. This is just the beginning of the bull market.
View OriginalReply0
BankruptcyArtist
· 10h ago
Oh no, a 45-day wait, it seems like there are really people lying in ambush now.
View OriginalReply0
ServantOfSatoshi
· 01-20 02:25
45 days to queue for staking? Now that's a real bullish signal, not those empty predictions.
View OriginalReply0
PebbleHander
· 01-20 02:16
Wait, 45 days to queue for staking? Isn't this just retail investors being pushed out? Are institutions monopolizing the market?
View OriginalReply0
HashBard
· 01-20 02:13
nah the 45-day queue is lowkey the realest sentiment meter we got rn... institutions aren't memeing around, they're actually stacking real collateral. that's the narrative arc nobody's talking about yet.
Reply0
just_another_fish
· 01-20 02:10
45 days of lining up to enter... This is the signal that big players are quietly accumulating. The selling pressure is gone, but buy orders are piling up into a mountain. I'm amazed.
View OriginalReply0
StableBoi
· 01-20 02:06
45 days of lining up to enter? This is the real bullish signal. The institutions have seen through it long ago.
#美国核心物价涨幅不及市场预估 The Ethereum staking ecosystem is undergoing a profound transformation. Have you noticed?$ETH $ARPA $GUN
An unprecedented phenomenon has emerged—the validator withdrawal queue has completely disappeared, while over 2.6 million ETH are waiting in line to be staked. Newcomers wanting to participate must wait at least 45 days before they can get on board. What does this shift mean? In simple terms, selling pressure is diminishing, while buying interest continues to accumulate.
The data is even more intuitive: nearly half of the total supply has been locked in staking contracts, turning into interest-bearing assets. Major institutional players (some have already staked up to 1.25 million ETH) are signaling their confidence with real capital—they view Ethereum as a new type of asset to allocate, with an annualized yield of around 2.8%.
The core logic isn't complicated: liquidity is being continuously drained. The circulating supply of ETH in the market is tightening, while the funds seeking to enter and earn yields are constantly increasing. This creates an increasingly tense supply and demand relationship. What truly drives the bull market isn't slogans, but this quiet and steadfast collective choice happening on-chain.
Don't just focus on the current price; that 45-day waiting queue is the real story.