#ETHTrendWatch The price of Ethereum depends on protocol updates, changes in staking, and real-world application of the network.
Glamsterdam Update (2026) – scalability improvement with a focus on MEV The dynamics of staking – changes in emissions can complicate life for individual validators. Regulatory factors – decisions on ETF for staking ETH Large players' accumulations – strategic purchases show institutional trust Tokenization of real assets (RWA) – over $6.2 billion in treasury assets on the blockchain strengthens the utility of the network.
Detailed overview
1. Protocol updates and MEV reform (mixed effect)
Overview: The Glamsterdam update, scheduled for 2026, aims to combat MEV abuses (maximally extractable value) through the separation of the proposer and builder roles, as well as the implementation of access control lists. This follows the successful Fusaka update in 2025, which increased the blob capacity by 8 times (from 6 to 48 blobs per block), reducing L2 layer fees by 95% (Coincu).
What does this mean: The MEV reform may reduce the risks of validator centralization, however, the complexity of the phased implementation of Glamsterdam ( in the second-third quarter of 2026 ) may delay scalability improvements. Historically, updates such as Dencun ( in March 2024 ) have led to a 60%+ increase in ETH before launch, but after the update is released, short-term corrections often follow.
2. Changes in the staking economy ( negatively for solo validators )
Overview: New research shows that solo stakers are more sensitive to yields (at 10%) compared to institutional pools. Proposed emission cuts could lead to negative returns for solo validators, accelerating the shift to liquid staking tokens (LST), such as Lido (ETH Research).
What does this mean: The risks of centralization may increase if individual validators leave — currently, 72% of validators are already working in pools. However, the growth of LST may enhance the utility of ETH in DeFi, for example, the collateral of stETH from Lido has increased by 40% since the beginning of the year.
3. The regulatory sword of Damocles ( positivity upon approval of the ETF for staking )
Overview: The SEC's decision on the staking ETH ETF (, for example, ETHA from BlackRock), is expected by November 2025. Approval will allow the ETF to reinvest income — unlike the Bitcoin ETF — and could potentially lock up more than 30% of the ETH supply (Daily Hodl).
What does it mean: ETFs on staking could attract investments comparable to $58 billion inflow into Bitcoin in 2025. A refusal could trigger mass liquidations – currently, there are about $900 million ETH queued for withdrawal.
Conclusion
The prospects of Ethereum in 2026 depend on the balance between technical innovations and the risks of staking centralization. The Glamsterdam upgrade and the approval of staking ETFs could lead to a supply shortage of (only 19% of ETH in circulation), while the exit of validators threatens the health of the network. Keep an eye on the open interest in ETH futures on CME — breaking the $8 billion mark will signal institutional confidence in the timing of the upgrade.
Will Ethereum's dominance in the tokenization of real assets offset the pressure of validator centralization?
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#ETHTrendWatch The price of Ethereum depends on protocol updates, changes in staking, and real-world application of the network.
Glamsterdam Update (2026) – scalability improvement with a focus on MEV
The dynamics of staking – changes in emissions can complicate life for individual validators.
Regulatory factors – decisions on ETF for staking ETH
Large players' accumulations – strategic purchases show institutional trust
Tokenization of real assets (RWA) – over $6.2 billion in treasury assets on the blockchain strengthens the utility of the network.
Detailed overview
1. Protocol updates and MEV reform (mixed effect)
Overview: The Glamsterdam update, scheduled for 2026, aims to combat MEV abuses (maximally extractable value) through the separation of the proposer and builder roles, as well as the implementation of access control lists. This follows the successful Fusaka update in 2025, which increased the blob capacity by 8 times (from 6 to 48 blobs per block), reducing L2 layer fees by 95% (Coincu).
What does this mean: The MEV reform may reduce the risks of validator centralization, however, the complexity of the phased implementation of Glamsterdam ( in the second-third quarter of 2026 ) may delay scalability improvements. Historically, updates such as Dencun ( in March 2024 ) have led to a 60%+ increase in ETH before launch, but after the update is released, short-term corrections often follow.
2. Changes in the staking economy ( negatively for solo validators )
Overview: New research shows that solo stakers are more sensitive to yields (at 10%) compared to institutional pools. Proposed emission cuts could lead to negative returns for solo validators, accelerating the shift to liquid staking tokens (LST), such as Lido (ETH Research).
What does this mean: The risks of centralization may increase if individual validators leave — currently, 72% of validators are already working in pools. However, the growth of LST may enhance the utility of ETH in DeFi, for example, the collateral of stETH from Lido has increased by 40% since the beginning of the year.
3. The regulatory sword of Damocles ( positivity upon approval of the ETF for staking )
Overview: The SEC's decision on the staking ETH ETF (, for example, ETHA from BlackRock), is expected by November 2025. Approval will allow the ETF to reinvest income — unlike the Bitcoin ETF — and could potentially lock up more than 30% of the ETH supply (Daily Hodl).
What does it mean: ETFs on staking could attract investments comparable to $58 billion inflow into Bitcoin in 2025. A refusal could trigger mass liquidations – currently, there are about $900 million ETH queued for withdrawal.
Conclusion
The prospects of Ethereum in 2026 depend on the balance between technical innovations and the risks of staking centralization. The Glamsterdam upgrade and the approval of staking ETFs could lead to a supply shortage of (only 19% of ETH in circulation), while the exit of validators threatens the health of the network. Keep an eye on the open interest in ETH futures on CME — breaking the $8 billion mark will signal institutional confidence in the timing of the upgrade.
Will Ethereum's dominance in the tokenization of real assets offset the pressure of validator centralization?