Ethereum whales have once again reinforced their faith in the smart contract network. Onchain data revealed that over half a billion dollars worth of ETH was staked in a single transaction. Etherscan captured the transaction worth a whopping 146 ETH, valued at over $580 million. This is likely the record for the most amount of ETH staked in a single transaction, one market observer noted.
This colossal move is a testament to the growing trust and interest in Ethereum’s staking mechanism, especially as the upcoming Ethereum 2.0 upgrade is on the horizon.
Moreover, whales, individuals, or entities that hold large amounts of cryptocurrency have been the key players, as their significant stakes highlight the evolving landscape of decentralized finance [DeFi] and the increasing role of Ethereum as a foundational layer for various DeFi applications.
Digging deeper, the amount of 146,110 ETH was staked via Lido, as revealed by the Lido DAO Bot on social media. The whale’s contribution through Lido not only boosts the total value locked [TVL] in the platform but also highlights the growing trend of using liquid staking solutions to maximize returns while retaining flexibility.
In a decentralized staking solution such as Lido, users can earn staking rewards while maintaining the liquidity of their assets through stETH, a tokenized form of staked ETH. This dual benefit is that it attracts whales, entities, or individuals with substantial holdings, to contribute large amounts to the staking pool.
Ethereum Fork In Q1 2025
As reported by TronWeekly, core developers announced their plan to implement the Pectra upgrade by the first quarter of 2025. This decision emerged from a recent execution layer meeting, marking Pectra as the next pivotal advancement for ETH, following the successful Dencun upgrade of March 2023.
Pectra is slated to bring several critical enhancements, led by the integration of the Ethereum Virtual Machine Object Format [EOF]. The EOF will bring forth approximately 11 improvement proposals aimed at refining the ETH Virtual Machine [EVM] code on both Layer 1 and Layer 2 levels. These enhancements are expected to optimize the efficiency and functionality of the EVM, which is the backbone of ETH’s smart contract operations.